Posted on 04/09/2007 6:37:07 PM PDT by GMMAC
Thousands of Canadian-trained doctors ply their trade in the U.S., study finds
Helen Branswell, The Canadian Press
via Canada.com, Monday, April 09, 2007
TORONTO -- One in nine trained-in-Canada doctors is practising medicine in the United States, says a study published in Tuesdays issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal.
If Canadian-educated doctors who were born in the U.S. are excluded, the number is one in 12 - and the study suggests that luring back some of these Canadian physicians would go a long way towards solving the countrys doctor shortage.
While they admit the exodus has abated a bit in the past couple of years, the authors say the impact is as if two averaged sized medical schools in Canada were doing nothing but training doctors for the United States.
There are only 17 medical schools in this country.
I must admit that I was sort of knocked over by the numbers. They were a lot bigger than Id anticipated, said one of the authors, Dr. Walter Rosser, chief of the department of family medicine at Queens University in Kingston, Ont.
There were 8,162 Canadian-educated doctors providing direct patient care in the U.S. in 2006, said the study.
Nearly half of the Canadian-educated physicians in the U.S. graduated from three medical schools - McGill University (24.7 per cent), the University of Toronto (15.2 per cent) and the University of Manitoba (eight per cent).
Canadian-educated specialists practising in the U.S. in 2006 represented nearly 20 per cent of the Canadian specialist workforce.
Of the Canadian doctors working in the States, 1,023 were in rural practices. Many parts of rural Canada are in dire need of doctors and finding a way to draw some of those people back home would be a major bonus, the study suggested.
I still believe that theres a lot of opportunity to get some of these folks back, said Rosser, who noted hes recently recruited a husband-and-wife team of Canadian doctors from Ohio, where they have been practising.
Generally theyre very unhappy, he said of Canadians in family practice in the U.S. In fact, theyre much more unhappy than family doctors here.
And so it seems to me theyre ripe for the picking.
And luring back Canadian doctors home from the U.S. doesnt pose the ethical quandaries associated with recruiting doctors from developing countries, a form of medical poaching that has been widely criticized but which is still widely done by developed countries.
The president of the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada said political authorities have to figure out whats behind the exodus to the U.S. - and do their best to stem the tide.
We need to further understand the reasons for this ongoing loss and find ways to encourage these physicians to practise in Canada, Nick Busing said in a guest editorial in the journal.
Rosser and his co-authors suggested provincial governments ought to consider offering incentives to attract Canadian-educated doctors back to Canada.
The former head of the division of family medicine at the University of Toronto, Rosser had become tired in the 1990s of watching his students head south of the border. In 1997, he recalled, all eight family medicine graduates in one program went to the United States to practise.
It was a time when governments were talking about restricting where new doctors could set up shop and doctors were feeling disenchanted and underappreciated, he said.
In talking with some colleagues in the U.S., Rosser realized with their help he could tap into the American Medical Associations physician masterfile, which lists all doctors living in the U.S. From the data set, they could tell which medical school each doctor graduated from as well as the doctors nationality.
Looking at patterns from 1995 onward, they could see that the return migration of Canadian doctors outnumbered those leaving for the first time in 2004 - 262 left and 317 returned.
Rosser believes the tide has turned, though he acknowledges Canada will always lose some doctors - in particular specialists looking to work in world-renowned centres of excellence elsewhere. But changes in policies at the provincial level have made practising in Canada more attractive, he said.
I think were in a much better position and I think were going to find the doctor shortage is going to reverse fairly quickly, within three or four years, hopefully.
© The Canadian Press
'Socialism - so, how do you like it so far?'
PING!
The sad thing is that I (a mid-level manager at a pharmaceutical company) make more than the average Canadian phyician.
Guess what? Lots of their patients fly down from Canada to see them!
Socialism drives both the providers and the customers out of the country!
/s
This is very interesting. I knew about the exodus of Canadian nurses because I have an aunt who has been an RN for about 40 years. She has worked with an increasing number of nurses from Canada.
The problem is, since we have the system, its going to be next to impossible to get rid of it. But when anyone suggests even a two-tier system, the liberals go into hysterics.
The doctors are “voting with their feet”.
All three doctors at the practice I go to are ex-Canadians.
Say ‘Aah’, eh.
Many an American has taken their medical training in Canada. Whose to say that the Dr’s that are going south were not just returning home.
We also convince immigrants to come here who cannot practice without upgrading their medical degrees and then limit to a handful the numbers that can take part in the residencies programs.
We are set up to be a defeatist system and them we wonder why it doesn't work.
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