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British ColumbiaSituation Critical

Clinic in B.C. Peace region closes after change in doctor payment model

The only clinic in the District of Taylor, about 18 kilometres south of Fort St. John, near the B.C.-Alberta border, is closing permanently on Saturday, making it more challenging for seniors living there to access medical services.

Fort St. John-based North Peace Primary Care Clinic says 'no longer practical' to provide services in Taylor

The only medical clinic in Taylor, B.C., a small community of more than 1,300 residents, is set to permanently close on Saturday after its operator's change of payment model for doctors serving the clinic. (Google Maps)

This story is part ofSituation Critical, a series from CBC British Columbia reporting on the barriers people in this province face in accessing timely and appropriate health care.

The only clinic serving a small community in B.C.'s Peace region is closing permanently on Saturday, making it more challenging for seniors living there to access medical services.

Early this month, the Fort St. John-based North Peace Primary Care Clinic (NPPCC), whose doctors provide in-person medical services atthe Taylor Medical Clinic, said it would discontinue services starting Oct. 1.

According to apost on Taylor Medical Clinic's Facebook page, the NPPCC has agreed toprovide the District of Taylor about 18 kilometres south of Fort St. John, near the B.C.-Alberta border with in-person patient care through the clinic since 2017.

The Taylor government subsidizes the clinic's operation costs,while the doctors receive from the province a fixed monthly salary.

However, the NPPCC has shiftedto a fee-for-service payment model for doctors, according to Rob Fraser, mayor of Taylor.

Under the payment model, doctors are considered self-employed professionals, and arepaid by the province for each office visit, test or operation. To stay afloat, they need to continuously work through a high-volume of patients and run a business at the same time.

In aletter addressed to the district in August, the NPPCC saidit wouldbe shifting to a different funding model and with this change, it would "no longer be practical" to continue providing services at Taylor Medical Clinic.

"We have enjoyed our five-year stint working with the community and are grateful for the opportunity to be of help," the letter reads.

CBC News reached out to NPPCC for comment on the change in payment model and the decision to discontinue services atTaylor Medical Clinic, but did not hear back in time for publication.

Challenges for seniors

While patients in Taylor will still have access to their doctors, they will now have to travel to the NPPCC in Fort St. John for in-person care which is bad news for elderly patients who may not have their own vehicle or access to a private car,says Fraser.

There isn't public transportation between Taylor and Fort St. John.About 150residents, or 11 per cent of Taylor's population, areage 65 and over.

"Unfortunately, [for] some of those entry-level families, they only have one vehicle, and so being able to free that vehicle up when mom or dad has gone to work with it and free that vehicle up to go to Fort St. John is difficult," Fraser said on CBC's Daybreak North.

Fraser says council is considering other medical service options for residents, including telehealth, whichTaylor Medical Clinic providedbetween 2014 and 2017.

He says he hopes the provinceand the Northern Health Authority could provide supports to help continuein-person medical services for Taylor residents.

In a written statement to CBC, Northern Health says it is exploring options for Taylor Medical Clinic to continue operations, but did not specify what those options were.


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With files from Daybreak North, Nicole Oud and The Early Edition