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Controversial for-fee service connects Ontario doctors and patients via video chat

A private service operating in Ontario connects doctors with patients via online video conferencing. But does a service like this help ease the strain on a burdened health-care system or give better access to those who can afford it?

Critics say Maple only improves doctor access for those who can afford it

For a fee, clients of Maple health can have a doctor consultation via video chat. (Submitted by Maple)

Tired of seeing his patients wait hours in an emergency roomto see a doctor about a minor ailmentor a prescription re-fill, Dr.Brett Belchetzfelt there must be a better way.

Now he heads Maple, a service that, for a fee, allows patients to consult with doctors via video chat over the Internet.

His controversial service started lastNovember and now operates in sevenprovinces.

For fees that start at $49 for a weekday visit, patients can consult with doctors about a number of common ailments, receive a diagnosis, even get a prescription sent to the pharmacy of their choice.

Belchetzsees the service as a way to expand patient access and eliminate necessary and expensive visitsto walk-in clinics and emergency rooms.

"I can tell you that about half the people I see in the ER actually aren't coming in with emergencies but because they have nowhere else to go," he said. "Canadians are forced to go into crowded walk-in clinics or the emergency room for routine primary care."

Belchetzbelieves that for most patient visits, he can give them the diagnosis and treatment they need "without laying a hand on them."

How it works

Once patients are registered andtriaged, they can schedule an "appointment" with a doctor online.

Prices start at $49 for a weekday consultation, and range up to $99 for a consultationafter midnight. Annual family memberships that offer unlimited consultation can be had for $580.

Maple doctors treat and diagnose anything on a list of ailments, from a coughs and minor cuts to a urinary tract infection or a sexually transmitted disease, while directing patients with more serious conditions to a walk-in clinic or hospital emergency room.

Belchetzsaid Maple patients leave happyand that diagnostic accuracy isn't compromised because its doctors aren't in the exam room.

"We're well surpassing what patients get in the hospital system," he said."You have the doctor's undivided attention."

Belchetzsaid doctors keep the majority of what patients pay, with Maple collecting a "small fee" for arranging the visit.

Visits aren't billed through OHIP

The question remains however, how can Maple charge patients for doctor visits in a country where primary patient care is supposed to be provided by a publicly funded healthcare system?

Doctors can only charge theOntario Health Insurance Plan (OHIP) for doctor visits that happen in person. At the same time, doctors can charge for services that aren't insurable under the provincial plan.

Belchetzsays he'd love to see Maple patients be able to bill OHIP for their visits.

"The government is very specific," he said. "If you are not seeing a doctor physically in the same room, that it's not an insured service and they will not pay for it."

Questions about two-tiered health care

Not everyone is happy with Maple's business model.

Natalie Mehra is theexecutive director with the Ontario Health Coalition, a watchdog group with a mandate to preserve access to public health care.

She said while technology should be used to save money and expand patient access, Maple only benefits patients who can afford it.

"It violates the idea that health care should be accessible to everybody on equal terms and conditions," she said.

Mehrasaid she worries that poorer Ontarians, seniors in particular, won'tbenefit from a service like Maple.

"The sickest suffer the most when you bring in user fees for health care while the wealthy use it to jump the queue," she said.

Mehraplans to raise the issue with Ontario's health ministry. She wants to see an OHIPbilling code created that would allow doctors to bill the province for online visits. Otherwise, she says services like Maple should be shut down.

The health ministry says it's monitoring health providers like Maple.

The province does offer its own service for doctor visits via teleconference called Telemedicine, but Belchetzsaid it requires doctors to use the government's network, while Maple can be accessed using any computer.

Belchetzsays his service is expanding, and part of a future where tools like Bluetooth-enabled thermometers will smash the idea that doctor care has to happen inside an exam room.

"There's no limit to the kind of providers that can be on a platform like this," he said.