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Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia's Clinician Assessment for Practice Program cancelled

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia has cancelled a program that helped immigrant doctors start working in the province.

CAPP was 'extremely essential' in attracting Egyptian doctor to Yarmouth

CAPP started in 2005, and the college says it delivered 100 physicians to under-served areas of Nova Scotia. (iStock)

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia has cancelled a program that helped immigrant doctors start working in the province.

The college shut down the Clinician Assessment for Practice Program (CAPP) on April 1.CAPPhelped international medical graduates get a special provisional licence to practisewith supervision inunder-servicedcommunities.

The college said it reviews CAPP each year, and decided it was time for a change.

"In recent years, we have made considerable and costly changes in an attempt to keep our assessments at high quality and in pace with the new standard," it wrote on its website.

"This year, the program review determined that a great deal more change was required. Rather than invest a significant amount of time and resources in what had become an outdated process, the college will now work with partners to build a new process that meets a new national standard."

"It is a new age of assessment of medical professionals. Single point-in-time examinations no longer represent best practices," addedDr. Gus Grant, the college's registrar.

"CAPP has been a great success story. It has delivered approximately 100 physicians to under-serviced areas, provided supervision, and enabled 99 per centof those physicians to attain the national standards for licensure.It has been a win-win initiative in my view.It is now time for it to give way to a national program."

Some worry cutting CAPP will make it harder for international physicians to find work in rural Nova Scotia. CAPP required doctors to keep a practice in a rural community for four years.

CAPP 'extremely essential' for Egyptian doctor

Dr.AbirHusseinusedCAPPto turn her work as a family doctor in Egypt into a practice inYarmouth. She brought her four children and husband with her. He's also a doctor, but didn't qualify forCAPPand so is finishing his residency in another province. He plans to work at theYarmouthhospital.

Husseinis happy to have made the cut before the program's cancellation.

"CAPPwas extremely essential for me to practice medicine in Canada," she toldInformation Morning'sDon Connolly.

"I was ready to take steps to be more familiar with the Canadian health system because it's obviously very different than the system in the Middle East or in many other countries.So, it's not just [about] the knowledge you need to acquire here, but it's also getting used to other system components that you have to realize and get used to."

CAPPphysicians in practice likeHusseinwere not affected by the cancellation. Physicians whoalreadypaid entrance exam fees will be refunded.

Husseinsays the retraining is important, and admits she and her husband were naive about what was expected of immigrant doctors.

As for future family doctors who want to come to Canada to practice medicine,Husseinsays she's not sure what will happen.

"I'm not exactly sure what's going to replaceCAPP. But, there might be as they say on theirwebsite a more national assessment that's organized by Medical Council of Canada and the Royal College [of Physicians and Surgeons], instead of having just separate provisional assessments."

The college did not say when any new program would be unveiled.