Ontario Medical Association rolls out Stop the Crisis Campaign
The Ontario Medical Association, which represents the province's 43,000 physicians, medical students and retired physicians, launched their Stop the Crisis initiative Wednesday.
The campaign outlines a strategy to deal with what the OMA said is a crisis facing Ontario's health-care system.
The Ontario Medical Association, which represents the province's 43,000 physicians, medical students and retired physicians, launched their Stop the Crisis initiative Wednesday, outlining priorities to fix the health-care system. (Photo from video)
"Individually, any of these issues would be considered a crisis," said OMA president Dr. Dominik Nowak.
"Together, we know they represent a catastrophe facing Ontario and our health care system … Ontarians deserve better and this plan outlines immediate steps the government must take to stop the crisis."
The OMA outlined six priority areas, including: ensuring everyone has a family doctor; saving rural and northern health care; keeping emergency departments open; improving access and funding for surgeries, specialists and diagnostic tests; a human health resources strategy; and, enhancing digital health care and innovation.
Solutions include physician-led team-based care, streamlining time-consuming administrative tasks and creating a northern physician workforce strategy.
Currently, there are more than 350 unfilled physician vacancies in northern communities.
"We need to retain a focus on doctors," said Dr. Sarah Newbery, assistant dean of physician workforce strategy at NOSM University.
"As teachers, we need to understand medical education as an apprenticeship, and we need doctors in all of the communities in which we need our future doctors to be able to learn and train."
Newbery said they need to ensure that keeping services open in hospitals is as seamless as possible.
"And to that end, we need a regional credentialing system that will make it as easy as possible for a doctor in one community in northern Ontario to be able to cover a shift or a service in an adjacent hospital."
The OMA is also asking the government to add more residency opportunities for international medical graduates, adopt AI scribes across the province and create a centralized referral.
- Download the CTV News app now
- Get local breaking news alerts
- Daily newsletter with the top local stories emailed to your inbox
"Our members are concerned that, without significant government intervention, health care in this province will deteriorate beyond repair," said OMA CEO Kimberly Moran.
"The OMA intends to work with the government on these solutions. Ensuring the future of health care in Ontario must be a top priority."
CTV contacted the Ministry of Health for comment but did not receive a response before deadline.
The OMA said 89 per cent of Ontarians surveyed said they are concerned about the future of the province's health care system.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Parliament on the road to an unprecedented confidence crisis, but there are off-ramps
If no political party is willing to say uncle, the drawn-out stalemate in the House of Commons is heading for an unprecedented situation that could amount to a tacit lack of confidence in the government, without anyone in Parliament casting a vote.
Danielle Smith '1,000 per cent' in favour of ousting Mexico from trilateral trade deal with U.S. and Canada
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she agrees it could be time to cut Mexico out of the trilateral free trade agreement with Canada and the United States.
'We're not the bad boy': Charity pushes back on claims made by 101-year-old widow in $40M will dispute
Centenarian Mary McEachern says she knew what her husband wanted when he died. The problem is, his will says otherwise.
How a viral, duct-taped banana came to be worth US$1 million
The yellow banana fixed to the white wall with silver duct tape is a work entitled 'Comedian,' by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan. It first debuted in 2019 as an edition of three fruits at the Art Basel Miami Beach fair, where it became a much-discussed sensation.
Slightly reshaped Giller Prize to go on, despite boycotts and protests
The shine on CanLit's glitziest night has dulled, at least according to some, amid sustained backlash against the Giller Foundation for maintaining ties with lead sponsor Scotiabank and other funders linked to Israel.
Gabbard's sympathetic views toward Russia cause alarm as Trump's pick to lead intelligence services
Tulsi Gabbard, U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's choice to lead the U.S. intelligence services, in 2022 endorsed one of Russia's main justifications for invading Ukraine: the existence of dozens of U.S.-funded biolabs working on some of the world's nastiest pathogens.
A gold pocket watch given to the captain who rescued Titanic survivors sells for record price
A gold pocket watch given to the ship captain who rescued 700 survivors from the Titanic sold at auction for nearly US$2 million, setting a record for memorabilia from the ship wreck.
Russia grinds deeper into Ukraine after 1,000 days of grueling war
When Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine in February 2022, the conventional wisdom was that the capital, Kyiv, would soon fall and the rest of the country wouldn't last long against a much larger enemy.
'A wake-up call': Union voices safety concerns after student nurse stabbed at Vancouver hospital
The BC Nurses Union is calling for change after a student nurse was stabbed by a patient at Vancouver General Hospital Thursday.