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Gatineau couple discharged from Ottawa family doctor 'shocked,' seeking answers

- Natalia Goodwin

A family from Gatineau, Que., is reeling after being told they will be discharged from their family doctor in Ottawa for a reason they are struggling to agree with - because they have Que‐ bec health cards.

Last month Samira Dra‐ peau, Drew Williams and their five-year-old son re‐ ceived separate letters from the Bruyère Family Medicine Centre in Ottawa where the family have been patients for eight years.

Many people in the Na‐ tional Capital Region live on one side of the Ottawa River but work on the other. It's al‐ so not uncommon for people on the Quebec side to re‐ ceive health services in Ot‐ tawa.

The letter stated that as of July 31, they would be dis‐ charged from the clinic and will no longer have access to services.

It went on to say that the family medicine centre will no longer be accepting outof-province patients.

The letter explained that providing care to patients outside Ontario has become difficult due to what it calls system-wide challenges in‐ cluding "obtaining referrals and results, inability to pro‐ vide virtual care, lack of com‐ prehensive and timely com‐ munication across provincial jurisdicti­on and reduced ac‐ cess to supports."

"I was shocked obviously. Really dishearten­ed," said Drapeau. "We really want to know how this happened be‐ cause so far, we haven't got‐ ten a clear answer as to how this decision [was] made and I think that we have a right to know what that process was."

In a statement, the clinic said doctors at both Bruyère and Primrose Family Medi‐ cine Clinics are reviewing and making individual practice discharge decisions.

It did not answer ques‐ tions about how many pa‐ tients would be affected or how this decision came about, except to reiterate the difficulti­es it sees in serving

patients who live outside On‐ tario.

But the couple said their experience at the clinic has been good and they have never had an issue.

"We've been able to book appointmen­ts, get X-rays, tests, all that sort of thing in Ontario and Quebec," said Williams. "There hasn't been any significan­t delay or even minor delay in care."

The family originally signed up with the clinic when they lived in Ottawa.

When they moved across the provincial border to Gatineau, they said they were told it wouldn't be a problem to stay with the clinic, which makes Drapeau even more frustrated with their current situation.

"Everyone has the right to access to health care and that access to health care in this region is really shameful to be honest," said Drapeau. "We need to figure out how to make this work for the re‐ gion."

College of physicians rules

The Ontario Ministry of Health said in a statement that doctors can determine how they run their practices, as long as they follow the regulation­s, standards and policies of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO).

The CPSO policy states doctors can end the relation‐ ship with a patient for a num‐ ber of reasons, including to reduce the size of the prac‐ tice, but that it must do so in a way that is fair, transparen­t and compassion­ate, and con‐ sider each case indepen‐ dently.

It said the issue of inter‐ provincial care is complicate­d and there are several consid‐ erations including virtual care.

The spokespers­on ex‐ plained that to perform virtu‐ al care, a physician would have to comply with the li‐ censing requiremen­ts of the jurisdicti­on where the patient is located.

The letter the couple re‐ ceived outlined measures Bruyère is providing to help with patient transition, such as the supply of prescripti­ons and followup on outstandin­g test results.

Drapeau and Williams are now looking at escalating the issue. They have an upcom‐ ing meeting with the director of the clinic, and have con‐ tacted the board and CPSO.

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