The country’s health-care system is suffering from an acute shortage of doctors — even as hundreds of qualified Canadian physicians trained abroad are turned away each year because of a tangle of red-tape and bias, experts say.
Canada is passing up a chance to add hundreds of these Canadian doctors to a strained system because, critics say, tight-fisted provincial governments have restricted the number of residency spots — and because the system explicitly privileges students who went to Canadian medical schools.
According to census data, there’s no shortage of doctors in Canada. What we have is a shortage of licensed doctors.
While estimates vary, there may be as many as 13,000 medical doctors in Canada who are not practising because they haven’t completed a two-year residency position — a requirement for licensing.
Critics of the system say discrimination is pervasive.
“There is a ‘don’t come home attitude’ in Canada,” said Rosemary Pawliuk, president of the Society for Canadians Studying Medicine Abroad.
“They have cute slogans like, ‘You’re wanted and welcome in Canada,’ but when you look at the barriers, it’s very clear that you should not come home. Their message is essentially, ‘Go away.’ And so they do.”
Under Canadian regulations, medical schools themselves decide who gets a residency. Critics say those schools have a vested interest in seeing Canadian-educated students get as many of those positions as possible — leaving those Canadians trained at reputable schools abroad at a serious disadvantage.
Critics say the system is designed to ensure that every graduate of a Canadian medical school — no matter how competent they are — is licensed to practice medicine. Only a relatively small number of underperformers are weeded out each year.
The same cannot be said for Canadians who attend medical school overseas.
A bias built into the system
“The physicians running these departments want the best — but that’s not allowed. They’re not allowed to pick from the full pool of qualified applicants,” said Pawliuk.
About 90 per cent of all residencies are set aside each year for Canadian medical graduates. Internationally trained doctors get the rest.
In some provinces, domestic medical school graduates and those educated abroad can’t compete against one another — there are two separate pools, and the one reserved for international medical graduates is much smaller.
According to data from the Canadian Resident Matching Service (CaRMS), 1,661 international medical graduates (IMGs) applied for residency positions in Canada last year. Just 439 were matched with the necessary post-graduate training. That’s a “match rate” of just 26 per cent.
And these are not foreigners — you must be a Canadian citizen or permanent resident to even apply for a residency in Canada.
“The Canadian public should be entitled to the best qualified Canadian applicant. Whether they’ve graduated from a Canadian school or an international school, whether they’re a Canadian by birth or if they’re an immigrant, they should be competing on individual merit,” Pawliuk said.
The way the residency system works has consequences. For example, 115 residencies nationwide — mostly in family medicine — went unfilled last year because Canadian medical school graduates weren’t interested in them, according to CaRMS data.
These Canadians trained abroad also face a series of other hurdles.
Unlike Canadian medical graduates, for example, international medical graduates have to sit for the “MCCQE Part 1” exam administered by the Medical Council of Canada before they can apply for a residency.
Canadian medical graduates can do it after they’ve already secured a spot and, each year, about 5 per cent of them fail the exam but continue with their residency anyway, according to data from Pawliuk.
A shortage of space in med schools
Canada’s residency placement rate compares poorly to what’s been reported in other countries.
In the U.S., for example, 61.6 per cent of American-born or naturalized citizens who go to school abroad are matched with a residency position, according to data from the U.S. National Resident Matching Program.
Many medical students go abroad to train because there are very few medical school spots available in Canada.
Tens of thousands of pre-med students are competing for just 2,800 first-year openings at the country’s 17 medical schools. Their acceptance rate is only about 5.5 per cent, according to university data.
Every year, about 1,000 would-be Canadian doctors go to school in countries like Australia and Ireland, where first-year spots are more plentiful.
Toronto-born Jake Portnoff is one of those students.
A pre-med graduate of Queen’s University, Portnoff wasn’t accepted at his Canadian medical school of choice — in part because there was a flood of applications after years of COVID-related deferrals.
He’s now at the University of Queensland with about 100 other Canadian students who were also shut out of what he calls a “very competitive and daunting” Canadian medical school selection process.
Portnoff said most of the Canadian students there want to return home — they’re just worried about a residency process that looks like an uphill battle.
“There are so many qualified and educated medical students who I believe really should be given a chance. The amount of residency seats available right now is just such a barrier. It’s certainly hard to hear that many qualified Canadians are being turned aside in the face of what we’re experiencing,” he told CBC News.
“Increasing the amount of residency spots would be a huge benefit to Canadians, especially when the system there is in a crisis.”
With some emergency departments closing due to staff shortages and a dearth of family doctors nationwide, Portnoff said it’s obvious Canada needs to increase the number of residency spots on offer.
“We do all we can to promote the best health-care outcomes for our patients. That doesn’t change, whether I’m in Australia or Canada. I’d take all my skills and clinical acumen home and all apply them in the Canadian system,” he said.
Number of international residency applicants dwindling
Beyond adding more residency positions, Portnoff called for other creative solutions — such as an international exchange program so that students in Australia can go home to Canada to gain experience before diving into the cutthroat residency matching process.
Portnoff co-founded the Canadian-American-Australian Medical Student Association, an advocacy group designed to help students make the transition at time when word has gotten out that it’s difficult to come back to Canada.
The number of international applicants to residency positions has fallen steadily from 2,219 in 2013 to 1,661 in 2022 — a drop of 25 per cent in just a decade.
Some foreign-trained doctors are giving up on Canada because the process is so difficult, Pawliuk said.
“If you tell people to stay away long enough, they will,” she said.
That’s an issue because Canada depends in part on foreign-trained doctors to fill the ranks of departing doctors.
Foreign-trained physicians historically account for about 25 per cent of all doctors, according to data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
In family medicine, nearly a third of all doctors have international medical degrees.
This week, the federal Liberal government announced an offer to the provinces of about $46 billion in new health-care spending.
In exchange for that cash, critics say Ottawa should demand that the provinces do more to streamline foreign-credential recognition.
As part of his health-care plan, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has pitched working the provinces to fast-track the process.
“It’s outrageous that my little girl has to sit in the emergency room with a migraine for six hours because there’s not enough doctors and nurses,” he told reporters Wednesday after Trudeau unveiled his health-care plan.
“I think we should team up with the provinces to come up with a simple system that gives a ‘yes’ or a ‘no.’ It should happen within sixty days, not six or seven years.”
The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada oversees the accreditation of medical resident training in Canada for specialists.
In a statement, the Royal College said it considers residents who completed medical school outside of Canada to be “important contributors to a robust education environment and future health workforce,” and it is currently considering some “alternate pathways” to streamline the system.
“I think five years from now, internationally trained physicians would be getting into the system within one or two years, regardless of their medical specialty, as opposed to five to seven years,” said Glen Bandiera, executive director of standards and assessment at the Royal College.
VANCOUVER – Environment Canada is warning about an intensifying storm that is expected to bring powerful winds to Vancouver Island and the British Columbia coast this week.
Matt MacDonald, the lead forecaster for the BC Wildfire Service, says models predict “explosive cyclogenesis,” which is also known as a bomb cyclone, materializing Tuesday night.
Such storms are caused by a rapid drop in atmospheric pressure at the centre of a storm system that results in heavy rain and high winds.
MacDonald says in a social media post that B.C. coastal inlets could see “hurricane force” winds of more than 118 km/h and create waves up to nine metres off Washington and Oregon.
Environment Canada posted a special weather statement saying the storm will develop off the coast of Vancouver Island on Tuesday, bringing high winds and heavy rain to some areas starting in the afternoon.
It says the weather system may cause downed trees, travel delays and power outages, adding that peak winds are expected for most areas Tuesday night, though the severe weather is likely to continue into Wednesday.
B.C. has been hit by a series of powerful fall storms, including an atmospheric river that caused flash flooding in Metro Vancouver in mid-October.
A lightning storm overnight and early Monday covered parts of Metro Vancouver in hail.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 18, 2024.
This will allow CBP to enhance border security while facilitating legitimate cross-border trade and travel. CBP officers will be deployed to busier ports of entry, enabling the agency to use its resources most effectively for its critical national security and border security missions.
These adjustments formalize current operating hours that have been in effect for more than four years at 13 ports of entry across the northern border, with eight ports of entry expanding hours. A small number of ports will see reduced hours in an effort to continually align resources to operational realities. Travelers who use these affected crossing locations will have other options within a reasonable driving distance.
Importantly, these adjustments have been made in close coordination with CBSA, to ensure aligned operational hours that further enhance the security of both countries.
CBP continually monitors operations, traffic patterns and volume, and analyzes the best use of resources to better serve the traveling public. CBP will remain engaged with local and regional stakeholders, as well as communities to ensure consistent communication and to address concerns.
The vast majority of the 118 northern border ports of entry will continue to operate at existing hours, including many with 24/7 operations. Locate ports of entry and access border wait times here.
The following are the new permanent POE hours of operation for select New York POEs:
Chateauguay, NY new hours of operation – 6 am to 6 pm
Trout River, NY new hours of operation – 6 am to 6 pm
Rouses Point, NY new hours of operation – 8 am to 8 pm
Overton Corners, NY new hours of operation – 6 am to 10 pm
Again, these changes will go into effect beginning at midnight, January 6, 2025.
Below is a listing of each location with the closest border crossing that will remain open 24/7 for appropriate commercial and passenger traffic:
Chateauguay, NY – closest 24/7 port: Fort Covington – 27 miles
Trout River, NY – closest 24/7 port: Fort Covington – 11 miles
Rouses Point, NY – closest 24/7 port: Champlain – 8 miles
Overton Corners, NY – closest 24/7 port: Champlain – 5 miles
For additional information or to contact a port of entry, please visit CBP.gov.
Follow us on X (formerly Twitter) @CBPBuffalo and @DFOBuffalo
For more on Customs and Border Protection’s mission at our nation’s ports of entry with CBP officers and along U.S. borders with Border Patrol agents, please visit the Border Security section of the CBP website.
Follow us on X (formerly Twitter) @CBPBuffalo @DFOBuffalo and @USBPChiefBUN
OTTAWA – An Ottawa man is pleading not guilty to charges of terrorism and hate-speech related to the promotion of a far-right group.
RCMP charged Patrick Gordon Macdonald in July 2023, alleging he took part in activities of a listed terrorist organization.
It’s the first case in Canada where the government laid charges for both terrorism and hate propaganda against someone for promoting a violent, far-right ideology.
As the trial opened Monday in Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice, Crown prosecutors alleged Macdonald helped produce propaganda for the Atomwaffen Division, an international neo-Nazi organization Canada listed as a terror group in 2021.
Prosecutors alleged he aided in the production of three propaganda videos designed to recruit new members and incite hatred against Jews.
The allegations have not yet been proven in court.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 18, 2024.