Exhausted and dreading new government rules, more Quebec doctors are eyeing retirement
CBC
Dr. Perle Feldman has been a general practitioner in Montreal's Parc-Extension neighbourhood for 40 years but faced with the government's latest plans to get physicians to take on more patients, she is ready to retire from her practice and focus instead on training medical students.
"The plans of the government to micromanage us even more than they are already micromanaging has taken a lot out of all of us," said Feldman, now 68. "We've been working like dogs throughout most of the pandemic."
Many others are feeling the same.
Last year, 275 doctors either retired or notified the province's health board, the Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec (RAMQ), of their intention to retire within the next two years.
That number is up sharply from 2017, when 145 announced their intention to leave.
At least 1,000 family doctors are urgently needed in the province, said Dr. Marc-André Amyot, the president of the general practitioners' association, the Fédération des médecins omnipraticiens du Québec (FMOQ).
"In the next five to 10 years we will have a significant wave of retirements," he said.
Age is part of it. Amyot points out that roughly 25 per cent of family doctors in Quebec are over 60.
The region facing the highest number of potential retirements is Montreal, where 44 doctors announced they planned to leave. Over 30 family doctors have retired or will soon in both Quebec City and the Montérégie region as well.
The average age of retirement was 68 in Montreal, and 65 in Quebec City and the Montérégie region.
It's a blow to the 945,000 Quebecers who are still on the waiting list for a family doctor, according to official estimates. The actual number may be closer to 1.5 million.
Last year the Legault government proposed setting a quota of 1,000 patients for each family physician with penalties suggested for those unable to meet demands, something they have since backtracked on.
At the peak of her career, Feldman says she had roughly 1,500 patients, whom she cared for from "womb to tomb."
Dr. Michel Minh Tri Tran says young doctors are already dealing with a heavy workload.