One-quarter of Yarmouth residents are on the wait-list for a family doctor
CBC
Officials in the Yarmouth, N.S., area say despite larger wait-lists for family doctors, there are signs accessing care will get easier.
In March 2019, 3.5 per cent of the population (873 people) in the Yarmouth zone was on the wait-list for a family doctor. That now sits at 25.8 per cent (6,402) as the province grapples with a health-care system under immense strain.
Yarmouth has the largest percentage of residents on the province's family doctor wait-list, according to Nova Scotia Health's February report.
Rebecca Cassidy is the community navigator for the Yarmouth region medical professional recruitment partnership. Her job is to attract doctors to Yarmouth and support them as they settle into their new lives in the southwestern Nova Scotia town.
Cassidy said that while there have been 41 new hires since March 2019, 20 have left, for reasons including retirement or moving away.
"I'd like to think that we're on the rise back up the hill, so to speak," she said.
Cassidy said besides the net gain in doctors — which include family doctors and specialists — there are other initiatives she thinks will help improve access to care in Yarmouth.
She said a primary care clinic opened recently in a Main Street pharmacy, there are some new weekend walk-in clinics in the town and the province has announced some virtual-care options.
"But again, those are not programs that … have anything to do with my project, other than they make my job easier," she said.
As community navigator, Cassidy's catch-all role finds her taking recruits on tours of the area, organizing events for existing ones — such as a pottery night or a trip to the Tusket Islands — or even speaking to a class of high school students to consider health care as a career option.
While Cassidy has worked in the community navigator position since September 2019, her position has been extended for three years.
Yarmouth town council recently voted unanimously to continue to help fund the position. Cassidy's position is paid for by a total of seven organizations.
Mayor Pam Mood says she's hearing anecdotally from people that finding a family doctor is getting better. But she said that's of little comfort to the ones still struggling to get care.
"When you don't have a doctor, it doesn't matter what's being done," said Mood. "And so that's the conundrum."