P.E.I. offers more financial bonuses for new doctors - Action News
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PEI

P.E.I. offers more financial bonuses for new doctors

The P.E.I. government has increased financial incentives to try to help recruit new doctors to the Island.

'We are allowing our recruitment teams to be positioned in a very competitive market'

A doctor wearing a white coat and stethoscope.
P.E.I.'s Department of Health is offering doctors in centres including Charlottetown, Summerside and Cornwall a $50,000 bonus to set up shop for at least three years. (David Donnelly/CBC)

The Prince Edward Island government is now offering new doctors bigger bonuses and a shorter service commitment when they sign upto work in the province, in an effort to recruit more than two dozen doctors.

Incentives arebeing offered for family physicians and some specialistswho take jobs anywhere in P.E.I., whereas in the past bonuses were reserved forsmaller, more remote communities.

For the first timenew family physicians in Charlottetown, Stratford and Cornwall are being offeredbonuses of $50,000.

"We have just been recently authorized to increase the amounts that we're offering family medicine physicians," said Rebecca Gill, the director of recruitment and retention for P.E.I.'s Department of Health and Wellness.

This is only part of the solution. Dr. Ann Collins

Doctors' commitment to work in the province has also been reduced fromthree to five years, to just three.

"It can be a bit more lucrative for the physicians who want to sign on for that three-year period," Gill said.

She stresses, however, incentives are just one component of a very complex recruitment process.

New doctors look for incentives

Gill said offeringsuchbonusesallows recruitment teams to be competitive and said the amounts P.E.I. is offeringare in linewith neighbouring provinces.

Health P.E.I. recently confirmed P.E.I. is losing several family physicians. (Laura Meader/CBC)

Medical residents who have just finishedtraining and are just getting established in their careers often do look for incentives, since they are looking at substantial student debt loads.

"It speaks to the challenges we're seeing in terms of being able to find qualified family medicine practitioners who want to work in all areas," said Gill.

The current structure still offers bigger bonuses for smaller communities such as Summerside, Three Rivers and beyond.

Medical groups react

In a statement to CBCNews, the Medical Society of P.E.I. says it'spleased with the additional financial incentives,but said bonuses will notsolve the national doctor shortage.

Dr. Ann Collins, past president of the Canadian Medical Association,said incentives are important to help entice people tocertain areas but are only a small part of the solution.

Collins said new grads do have huge debt loads but conditions inthe workplace are important too, along with work-life balance.

"They are very interested in who will be there to support them, who they'll be working with, what will their overhead or the cost of the infrastructure of running the office be," said Collins."This is only part of the solution."

Competitive market

Gill said new incentivesshould help make the Island look more attractive to new doctors deciding where to set up.

"We are allowing our recruitment teams to be positioned in a very competitive market."

She said it's one tool, and it can sometimes help to start conversations with interested doctors.

The province is currentlysearchingfor 27 family physicians, and Gill said there's a constant need for specialists in anesthesia, emergency medicine and psychiatry.