State of pediatric services in Sask. raising concerns - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 20, 2024, 05:25 AM | Calgary | -10.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatoon

State of pediatric services in Sask. raising concerns

Saskatchewan has fewer pediatricians than most provinces and pays them less than any other specialist. People wonder how officials plan to staff the $285-million Children's Hospital of Saskatchewan.

Sask. has fewer pediatricians than most provinces, pays them less than any other specialist

Elizabeth Stack and daughter, Harriet, sit in the family's living room. Stack hopes the new Children's Hospital of Saskatchewan will have enough pediatricians to help Harriet and other children. (Jason Warick/CBC)

With construction progressing on the $285-million Children's Hospital of Saskatchewan, parentsand experts wonder ifpediatricians will want to work there.

"We've spent enormous sums of money building a children's hospital [but]we're not going to be able to staff it at current reimbursement rates," said Glen Beck, professor emeritus of health economics at the University of Saskatchewan.

Pediatricians continue to be the lowest-paid doctors in the province, according to the latest figures from Saskatchewan's Ministry of Health.

Their average gross paymentof $193,600 per year is less than half of that of their fellow specialists. It's only a fraction of the $1.15 million earned by the average ophthalmologist, with one topping the chart at more than $2.3 million.
Pediatricians continue to receive lower pay than any other specialists in Saskatchewan.

Not only are pediatricians the lowest paid, but they're also some of the only specialists whose pay has decreased in the past five years.

"I feel worried, for sure," said Elizabeth Stack, whose four-year-old daughter, Harriet, requires a host of pediatric services.

"They're working really hard, doing a job that's really difficult. You're interacting with parents who have just been given devastating news about their child."

Stack said it's "really heartbreaking" to hear pediatricians are the lowest paid. She's wonders if Harriet and other kids will be able to get the care they need when the new Children's Hospital of Saskatchewan opens in 2019.

Fewer pediatricians than other provinces

The comparably low pay could be one reason Saskatchewan has fewer pediatricians per capita than any other province except New Brunswick, which has no children's hospital.

Saskatchewan has61 generalpediatricians. Meanwhile, Manitoba has 110 and Alberta has 343, according to the Canadian Medical Association's 2015 report.

The provincial government and the Saskatchewan Medical Association largely control the money that is allocated to each specialty.

"This has been a problem for well over a decadeand it's just not been addressed," said Beck."And if it's not addressed, like all problems, it doesn't get better; it gets worse."
Saskatoon Health Region pediatrics head Dr. Laurentiu Givelichian said he's confident an additional 15 to 17 pediatricians can be found to staff the Children's Hospital of Saskatchewan. (Jason Warick/CBC)

The head of pediatrics for the Saskatoon Health Region, Dr. Laurentiu Givelichian, agreed Saskatchewan needs more pediatriciansand that low pay is part of the problem.

But he is confident the region will be able to recruitthe 15 to 17 pediatricians needed to staff the children's hospital.

New incentives

Changes have recently been made to give new recruits more cash if they take on academic duties at the University of Saskatchewan. Givelichian said that's helped increase thesupply of hospital-based pediatricians by more than 40 per cent in recent years.

As for all other community-basedpediatricians, meetings are being held with the Saskatchewan Medical Association and government to increase pediatricfees. No changes have been made yet, but Givelichiansaid that could be in place next year.

"Their fees are going to be comparable to the rest of Canada," he said.

Critics notethere have been countless meetings over the years with few results.

Beck said changes have to be made soon or pediatricians will "simply leave Saskatchewan for greener pastures."
Work continues on the $285-million Children's Hospital of Saskatchewan, but some wonder if enough pediatricians can be recruited to staff it. (Jason Warick/CBC)