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Nova Scotia

Now recruiting: Nova Scotia starts testing foreign-trained family doctors

Nova Scotia has reopened its doors to family physicians trained in other countries in a move that could help cut down on the province's lengthy wait list for a doctor.

Successful physicians will have to sign a return of service agreement to stay in the province

Up to 10 physicians will be tested in the program in the first year. (David Donnelly/CBC)

Nova Scotia hasreopened its doors tofamily physicians trained in other countriesina move that could help cut down on the province's lengthy wait list for a doctor.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia has begun to screen applications for a long-awaited program that will allow foreign-trained doctors to prove theypossess the clinical skills and knowledge to work in the province.

"I'm excited," said Dr. Fiona Bergin, clinical director of the Nova Scotia Practice Ready Assessment Program, which is being run by Dalhousie University in Halifax.

"I'm very hopeful that we'll be able to contribute to the need for family physicians in the province."

Previous program cut

The program fills a void created in 2015when new national standards were ushered in and the college opted to scrapa similar program and rebuild.The changemeant about 40 working physicians were cut from the systema significant loss when thousands of people are without a primary care provider.

The new program requirescandidates to meet specific qualifications, write a therapeutic examand have their language skills assessed.They will thenwork under the supervision of two different physicians for six weeks each.

Dr. Fiona Bergin is leading the Nova Scotia Practice Ready Assessment Program. She says she's been working with doctors across the province to find placements for program participants. (Brian MacKay/CBC)

"We're creating the opportunities for them to prove to us that they are ready, able and competent to practise family medicine in Nova Scotia. And if they are, we're more than happy to take them and more than happy to get them out into the communities in which they're needed," said Bergin.

Successful applicants will sign a return of service agreement to stay and work in Nova Scotia. The health department hasn't yet specified how long they'll be required to stay.

'A great initiative'

The move is being applauded by the Immigrant Services Association of Nova Scotia. At any given time, ISANSestimates it's working with 80 international medical graduates.

"It's really important, it's a great initiative," said Jan Sheppard Kutcher, co-chair of aninternational medical graduates workgroup at ISANS. She saidup until now, many of the physicians have been discouraged.

"As many people know, access to residency training is extremely difficult. And so without practice ready assessment and without access to postgraduate training, there really was no pathway to licensure," she said.

"It was very disheartening and really a lose-lose situation for the [international medical graduates]and for the health-care system."

10 doctors to be accepted

One of the 24 candidates who has applied so far to the program has already beenrecommended for the next step of the process.

At most, 10 physicians will be accepted in the first year.

"That may prove to be ambitious for the first year, but that remains to be seen," said Bergin. "In future years, it'll be determined whether that's a good number for us to aim for, whether we should have more."

The program is also limited to family doctors. But the framework has been created to potentially assess specialists in the future.

"It might be a bit premature to jump to that until we see how we can do with the family physicians," said Bergin.