Pause on UPEI medical school sought by group representing Island physicians - Action News
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Pause on UPEI medical school sought by group representing Island physicians

The group representing about 400 physicians and medical learners on P.E.I. is recommending a pause on the UPEI medical school until the specific impacts on the health-care system can be better addressed.

Medical Society of P.E.I. says more time needed to develop path forward

A beige building with a University of Prince Edward Island Faculty of Medicine sign above the entryway.
UPEI's medical school would require 135 doctors to devote 20 per cent of their work time to teaching, according to a consultant's report. (Ken Linton/CBC)

The group representing about 400 physicians and medical learners on P.E.I. is recommending a pause on the medical school at the University of Prince Edward Island untilspecific impacts on the health-care system can be addressed.

Dr. Krista Cassell said it's not that the Medical Society of P.E.I. (MSPEI)is against the school,but it has ongoing concerns about the timeline.

"The needs are quite significant," Cassell, the group's president, said in an interview with CBC News: Compass host Louise Martin.

"There are a good number of physicians required and a good number of infrastructure changes that are needed in the very near future in order to make this work."

The university plans to launch its medical program by taking in 20 undergraduate students in fall 2025, initially operating as a satellite campus for the medical program at Memorial University in Newfoundland and Labrador.

By 2026, UPEI plans to offer a joint medical degree with Memorial University once the program receives approval from the Maritime Provinces Higher Education Commission.

WATCH | Too many current shortfalls in system, doctor says:

Doctors support UPEIs ambitious plan for medical school, but say the path forward isn't clear

7 months ago
Duration 2:28
Medical Society of P.E.I. president Dr. Krista Cassell says physicians on the Island know the positives that could come with a provincial medical school, but mass shortages in the health-care system have them wondering how it will operate.

A report released last month by Spindle Consulting suggested the medical school would require 135 doctors to devote 20 per cent of their work time to teaching.

P.E.I. currently has a shortage of about 50 physicians, and there are more than 36,000 people on the patient registry waiting for a family doctor.

The report projects that without changes in recruitment, retention and doctor complement levels, the province will fall short of having the required number of doctors on hand to participate in teaching duties.

"While this is a roadmap to get us there, we haven't actually met yet and had conversations about how we put this plan into action and we look forward to this," Cassell said.

"Certainly at this time,MSPEI is suggesting that we pause on any plan until we get the foundational work in place and that certainly continues to be our opinion that this needs more time and work to develop the pathway forward."

MSPEI is a partner with the strategic health system integration committee, which examines the integration of medical learning into the P.E.I. health system. It also had a role in the selection of Dr. Preston Smith as the school's dean of medicine.

'Not been widely consulted'

But Cassell said the physician community at large has "not been widely consulted or heard."

There is not just a shortage of physicians, she said. Those physiciansmay need specialized teams and equipment, or access to operating room time, which are all in short supply.

"We've seen medical schools open at other times and at other places and successfully integrate themselves quite well," she said.

"I don't think that it's impossible in P.E.I. I just think that it's going to take some good collaborations, some good communication, some problem-solving and some creating of a path forward that I think we haven't quite met yet."