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Windsor

Windsor needs more family doctors. Other municipalities are spending big to attract them

The need for family physicians in Windsor-Essex, Ont. has increased since June, but the solution to the issue has opinions divided.

Opinion divided on whether incentives can address demand for family physicians

Lauren Schmidlin and her family outside of their Windsor home. The wait time for their family doctor has turned from days to months as they care for their children, one who is currently ill. (Josiah Sinanan/CBC)

The need for family physicians in Windsor-Essex, Ont. is growing, butthere's mixed opinion on whether incentive programs can help attract more doctors to this region.

According to the head of the Essex County Medical Society,the current need for family doctors in Windsorand Tecumseh areas is somewhere between 50 and 60 physicians. That's an increase from 37 in June, according to the society, which says this gap is significant.

London, in comparison, is estimated to only be short 25 family physicians.

Lauren Schmidlin is one of manyparents concerned withthe state of affairs.Though she has a family doctor for herself, wait times are long and she's still searching for a doctorfor her children.

"Since [we] chose our family doctor, we initially would wait maybe two or three days to get an appointment, max," she said. "Now, it's two or three months. Ever since, we've become regulars at the local walk-in clinic, who tellus that they see all of our doctor's patients."

One way to tackle the issue, from the perspective ofWard 1 candidate Darcie Renaud, is to increase the current municipal budget that supports physician recruitment.

Windsor does not offer incentives directly but provides$25,000 annually to theSchulich School of Medicine andDentistry's Windsor Campus to support its family medicine and psychiatry residency programs, with the aim of keeping doctorsin the region after graduation.

Renaud saidother municipalities are spending up to 10 times more on physician recruitment.

One example isKingston's recruitment and incentive program launched in January, which commits $250,000 annually to family physician recruitment. Kingstonhired nine new family doctors in August, and has about half of Windsor's population.

Renaudsaid she believes we can be doing more to retain our health-care talent, and unless changes are made, we should anticipate an exodus of sorts on an already pinched health-care workforcein Essex County.

Renaud, a candidate for Ward 1, says physician recruitment funding needs to be increased. (Screenshot taken via Zoom/Josiah Sinanan)

"In looking at what other municipalities around the province are doing, we're falling short," she said.

"I'm worried that if we don't get on top of it, because other municipalities are going so much further than we are when it comes to recruiting physicians, we'll be left behindbecause we are competing with other regions. I'm nervous we'll lose [newly graduated] doctors to those other regions, and we're going to need them."

Several other Ontario municipalities are funding doctor recruitment, includingHastings County, which hasbudgeteda $100,000 payout to medical students who commit to five years practising family medicine in the area.

Fred Francis is seeking re-election in Windsor's Ward 1. (Submitted by Fred Francis)

Fred Francis, the incumbent councillor in Ward 1 who is seeking re-election, said city council hasn't considered raising the funding level for the residency program because the school hasn't expressed a need.

He noted that in the past, thecouncil hadspoken withSchulichabout the need for new medical school, which was then established, after whichcouncilsupported recruitment efforts, and now, he said, it's time to talk about the new hospital.

He's said he's hearing that there is more of a need for specialists rather than family doctors, which he thinks the new hospital project will support.

"Having a state-of-the-art acute care facility is a great reason to stay in Windsor as a new graduate," he said.

Having the facility is "part of creating a medical community," he said.

"So as a family doctor, you want to start your practise in a city that has a reputation for having the latest and greatest facility. It becomes a health-care system."

Dr. Vikesh Maraj, a family doctor and president of the Essex County Medical Society, isn't convinced that more funding is necessarily the answerand saidthis issue isn't limited to Windsor.

"I think we need to ask ourselves what's forcing physicians to go into early retirement, what's discouraging people from getting into family medicine," he said.

"It all comes down to burnout rates being accelerated. So what we as family doctors have been asking for and advocating for is an increase in what we call'team based care.' In other words, we're looking for more support in how we practise. But absolutely, if we could do recruitment more robustly, that certainly would not do any harm. Every little bit helps."

Dr. Vikesh Maraj is the president of the Essex County Medical Society. (WECHU)

Maraj also shared that there is a trend of less interest in new graduates pursuing family medicine. According to Maraj, the family physician demographic is aging and retiring, and it takes two new grads to replace the roster of one retiring physician.

Renaudsaidthere may be other solutions as well.

"I'd like to see us also do something that probably won't cost much, which is to partner with the University of Windsor and the Essex County Medical Society to really study the shortage and what's going to be needed as far as family doctors in the future, before it hits a crisis point."

Most graduates sticking around

According to a spokesperson for theSchulich school, more than 80 per cent of graduates from the family medicine residency program have opted to remain in Windsor-Essex.

"Investments like this from the city are part of how the school builds a sense of community, morale and belonging among our residents in Windsor and, combined with other strategies, help our community to retain physicians," the spokesperson said.

Right now, the school does not plan to ask the city to boost its contribution to the program.The figure was raised from$15,000 to $24,000 in 2019to expand the program to include psychiatry residents.

Bill Marra, CEO at Hotel-Dieu Grace Healthcare,saidthat the $25,000 funding amountwas decided on while he was a city councillor.

"It was a collaborative effort and a requested amount," he said. "I didn't see a need to update that budget, everyone was happy with it. Now [at Hotel-Dieu Grace Healthcare], we have no challenges recruiting. My credit goes to the residency program at the Schulich School of Medicine satellite campus.It's a fantastic program."

Hotel-Dieu Grace Healthcare, however, does not hire family physicians through the program, but ratherspecialists such as geriatricians and psychiatrists.

A man wearing a suit
Bill Marra, president and CEO of Htel-Dieu Grace Healthcare. (Dale Molnar/CBC)

Waiting months for a doctor

Yuxin Bai, a student at the University Windsor who is originally from Saskatchewan, was attempting to help two friends of his find a family doctor after graduation. They had to wait four months.

"Eventually, I found one clinic that had a wait list sign-up form online, and called them to ask for an approximate wait time. They said twomonths. [I] got my friends to fill out the forms in April, and they finally both got a family doctor in August,"Baisaid inan email to CBC News.

"I was surprised by how difficult it was to find a family doctor. Even as a long-time resident in Canada and a medical student, I found the process confusing."

Meanwhile, Schmidlin, a parent of two, is unsure what will come next in her situation.

"I'm in a bit of a pickle for care for my kids right now," she said. "My current family doctor doesn't want to practise family medicine anymore and is not taking on new patients. I haven't started looking for a new one yet, because it's just another thing that I would have to juggle."

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