Every morning, dozens line up outside a St. John's walk-in clinic. They say they don't have another option
CBC
Before the Mundy Pond walk-in clinic in St. John's opened at 8 a.m. Monday, dozens of people were already lined up, hoping to secure an appointment.
"There's a lineup every time," said Clara English, a senior waiting outside the clinic.
English began going to the clinic over the winter, after her family doctor retired. She said the clinic is her only option — other than the hospital.
"Then you're waiting in the waiting room for eight or nine hours. And I mean, you know, I don't think that's a good idea."
She said she's on a waiting list for a new family doctor but she isn't expecting to get one soon.
"It's terrible, because, you know, when you get to a certain age, it's scary, isn't it?" she asked. "I mean, you know, we're not young.… We're talking about in your 70s and 80s."
English isn't alone. According to the Newfoundland and Labrador Medical Association, more than 136,000 people across the province don't have a family doctor.
The Mundy Pond clinic was one of the first of the province's collaborative-care clinics, also known as family-care teams. Premier Andrew Furey has said family-care teams are part of the future of health care in the province, a way to mitigate staff shortages in all areas of the medical system.
"Team-based care is an essential feature of an effective and sustainable modern health-care system," Furey said Monday.
Karen Doyle arrived at the Mundy Pond clinic at 7 a.m., hoping to get help with a throat infection.
"The service, I think, is great for anybody. Like if this wasn't here, all these people wouldn't have access to … medical help that they need," she said.
Newfoundland and Labrador has eight family-care team clinics either in progress or already operating. Last week, Furey and Health Minister Tom Osborne said 10 more family-care team clinics are in the works.
According to Furey and Osborne, the 18 family-care teams will serve about 80,000 people across the province.
In addition to the $21.2 million earmarked to open the new family-care team clinics, the provincial government has made a slew of spending announcements — including some in the new provincial budget, released last week — aimed at recruiting and retaining primary-care physicians.