a new way of working is needed.
every person in canada should have access to a primary care team, who can manage health issues faced by a patient collaboratively. whoever is the first point of contact in the health system should ensure that a patient is treated, referred to, and coordinated to receive care by a team of providers who all document their care in a shared record to ensure seamless care.
there is an inherent accountability built in being part of a team, whether co-located or not, to deliver holistic patient care. without greater access enabled through coordinated team-based care, the health of canadians will continue to suffer.
as a family physician and a health workforce researcher, we co-led the
team primary care: training for transformation
initiative in partnership with over 20 primary care practitioner groups and 100 healthcare organizations across canada to begin to stitch together a quilt of solutions. this taxpayer-funded initiative had over 800 participants call on our governments to make sure future investments in primary care include coordinated training to enable canadians access to a primary care team.
another complementary taxpayer funded project,
ourcare
, collected the perspectives of thousands of people across the country calling for standards to define what every person in canada should expect from primary care. these include being able to receive culturally safe care, from a primary care clinician, who works with others in a team, providing ongoing care, connected to community and social services, and accountable to the communities served.