As Canada grapples with a doctor shortage, Ottawa announces immigration stream for health workers
CBC
The federal government announced Wednesday it will use Canada's immigration system to recruit more in-demand health-care workers as the country grapples with a severe shortage of some professionals in the field, such as family doctors.
Speaking at an event in Bedford, N.S., Immigration Minister Sean Fraser and Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos unveiled a new dedicated "express entry" stream for health professionals in the economic immigration program.
They said a notice will soon go out to 500 foreign health workers inviting them to apply for permanent residency in Canada.
Another 1,500 workers will get an invitation next week — a staggered launch for a program that is expected to be well subscribed.
The invitations will go to foreign doctors, nurses, dentists, pharmacists, physiotherapists and optometrists as part of a push by the federal government to deal with a health-care crisis that is, in large part, a staffing crisis.
The situation is dire. An estimated six million Canadians do not have a family doctor, according to research compiled by Angus Reid. Canada is short of specialists as well.
The physician shortage is expected to be even more acute in just five years' time. Federal data suggests Canada will be short some 44,000 doctors, including over 30,000 family doctors and general practitioners, by 2028.
"Health professionals have been working around the clock to provide world-class care to individuals in communities across Canada, but it's no secret that our health system needs more workers to continue delivering the quality care that people in Canada deserve," Fraser said.
"In no sector is the labour shortage more prominent than in the health-care sector," Duclos said.
"Today's announcement will facilitate, fast-track and streamline permanent residency applications and help improve health workforce recruitment efforts by bringing more qualified health professionals into Canada."
Fraser said that between 2017 and 2022, Canada welcomed around 21,000 health-care workers — a rate of just over 4,000 workers a year.
He said the goal now is to bring in around 8,000 new health-care workers a year.
"This is a big change," Fraser said. "We can do more and with this new tool we're going to do more. Health care is the number one concern for so many families."
While the government is committed to bringing in more immigrant health-care workers, it's not a cure-all for what ails the system.