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      • As the number of people across Ontario without a family doctor reaches a record high, Premier Doug Ford's government is facing a fresh push to make family practice more attractive to physicians by improving compensation.
      www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/ontario-family-doctors-pay-compensation-ohip-billing-fees-1.7137716
  1. Mar 11, 2024 · As the number of people across Ontario without a family doctor reaches a record high, Premier Doug Ford's government is facing a fresh push to make family practice more attractive to...

  2. Jan 31, 2023 · The trend is triggering a push for solutions to the family doctor shortage: making family practice more attractive to medical school graduates, streamlining family doctors' paperwork to...

  3. Mar 24, 2024 · The provincial government needs to incentivize medical students to pursue family medicine by making it an attractive field to work in, said Dr. Ramsey Hijazi, a family physician in Ottawa...

  4. Oct 30, 2024 · Ontario’s finances are in better shape today than they have been in decades. Earlier this year, Ontario received a credit rating upgrade, reversing a trend of downgrades under the previous government. We are committed to balancing the budget, with a projected surplus of $0.9 billion by 2026−27.

  5. Jan 12, 2024 · Ontario has added more residency spaces for family doctors, but the government is fighting a trend. Increasingly, family medicine graduates don’t go on to establish a family medicine practice, choosing instead to run sports medicine clinics or work shifts in hospitals.

    • Randall Denley
  6. May 1, 2024 · If we want to fix health care in Ontario, we need more family doctors. Here’s why we may have reason to hope. Any measures that make the field of family medicine more attractive, that...

  7. Nov 7, 2023 · The Ontario College of Family Physicians is calling on the Ontario government to take urgent action to support family doctors and improve patients’ access to care. The College’s latest forecast shows a troubling trend: approximately 1 in 4 Ontarians – that’s 4.4 million – will be without a family doctor by 2026.

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