Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

PEI

Walk-in clinics on P.E.I. in high demand due to doctor shortage

The hottest ticket on P.E.I.these days isn't for a concert or a sports event, but rather to see a doctor at a walk-in clinic, especially for the increasing number of people without a family physician.

As of June 20, the province's patient registry had nearly 24,000 names

Sign on building says Walk In Clinic.
With nearly 24,000 people on P.E.I. without a family physician, many are seeking treatment at walk-in clinics. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

The hottest ticket on P.E.I. these days isn't for a concert or a sports event, but rather to see a doctor at a walk-in clinic, especially for the increasing number of people without a family physician.

Summerside resident Rose Gallant and her husband woke up at 4:30 a.m. to get to theSherwood Family Medical Centre walk-in clinic in Charlottetown at 6:30 a.m. that's 90 minutes before the clinic opened. The couple wasthe first in line.

"You never know when the doctor's in Summerside, in the clinic. Whenever he feels like going. Then he takes his own patients over you, so we come here," she said.

A woman wearing a face mask outside a building, with a man wearing a face mask opening door to building behind her.
Rose Gallant and her husband are from Summerside but were the first ones to start the line at a Charlottetown walk-in clinic at 6:30 a.m. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

At least three doctors in Charlottetown recently announced they would close their practices, leaving more than 5,000 patients on the Island without a family physician. This week, the province's patient registry was updated to nearly 24,000 names.

And as the doctor shortage on P.E.I. continues to grow, so do the lines at walk-in clinics.

New patients, no doctors

Hayden Smith saidheempathizes with the Islanders who have been without a family doctor for many years.

He was in the linewith Gallant and only showed up because he found himself among the thousands who have just lost a doctor.

"This is a new experience for us, it's a new reality," he said.

But given the health-care issues on the Island, he said it's to be expected that wait times at walk-in clinics would be this long.

We come from Summerside to see a doctor. That's crazy.- Rose Gallant

"It's not the fault of the doctor or the staff, it's just the situation the way that it is on P.E.I. It's a crisis," he said.

Other options

Many walk-in clinics on P.E.I., like the Sherwood one in Charlottetown, are managed privatelyand located in or near drug stores.

About 10 people lined up outside a building.
At least 10 people were lined up in front of the Sherwood Family Medical Centre walk-in clinic before its hours of operation to make sure they could see a doctor. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

In a statement to CBC News, Health P.E.I. saidit is not responsible for the majority of walk-in clinics that are privately-run.

However, with the amount of people on the patient registry, officials are still encouraging patients to go to walk-in clinics, but warn they should expect an increased uptake for services at this time.

The Department of Health saidthe long-term goal is a shift toward a team-based approach, where doctors share patient loads with other health-care professionals.

The P.E.I. Pharmacists Association said many people seeking treatment at walk-in clinics are there for issues that don't necessarily require a doctor's visit, andthey should talk to a pharmacistinstead.

The association saidpharmacists can help with a numberof ailments, including:

  • Hay fever and allergies.
  • Premenstrual pain.
  • Emergency contraception.
  • Minor sleep disorders.
  • Nicotene dependence.
  • Yeast and urinary tract infections.

Association executive director Erin MacKenzie also saidpublic funding of pharmacy services could help.

"Pharmacists are ready and able to offer even more services under a publicly funded model ... some of the non-urgent patients could be managed by their pharmacists, reserving more complex and urgent cases for our expert physicians," she said.

With files from Brian Higgins