Database of Health Workforce Innovations
17
Emergency pan-Canadian licensure/credentialing of health care workers
It is critical that Canada’s rural Emergency Departments (EDs) remain open and staffed. It is of national interest to avoid unnecessary rural patient transfers to urban and tertiary care centres already at full capacity. Similarly, robust repatriation of patients back to their rural origin will optimize tertiary care capacity. Some rural regional hospitals have ICUs, in-situ ventilator capability, and a core generalist specialty service but require specific attention and support.
Rural Canadian resources are ill equipped for the pandemic. Rural EDs are much smaller and have limited human health resources making it difficult to mitigate staff illness, self-isolation/quarantine requirements and burn-out. The staffing models and service impacts are also different. Full scope rural family practice generalists cover multiple community roles simultaneously. In addition to ED coverage they provide office practice, inpatient and long-term care, maternity and obstetrics, OR assisting, chemotherapy, remote clinic oversight, Indigenous population outreach and transfer medicine to name a few.
Rural Canadian resources are ill equipped for the pandemic. Rural EDs are much smaller and have limited human health resources making it difficult to mitigate staff illness, self-isolation/quarantine requirements and burn-out. The staffing models and service impacts are also different. Full scope rural family practice generalists cover multiple community roles simultaneously. In addition to ED coverage they provide office practice, inpatient and long-term care, maternity and obstetrics, OR assisting, chemotherapy, remote clinic oversight, Indigenous population outreach and transfer medicine to name a few.
Create a standardized national system for rapid / dynamic intra-provincial and cross-provincial regulatory
licensing. Improving provincial health authority credentialing and privileging for multiple jurisdictions (rural to
urban, urban to rural).
licensing. Improving provincial health authority credentialing and privileging for multiple jurisdictions (rural to
urban, urban to rural).
- Licensure flexibility
- Interjurisdictional mobility
- Community Health Workers
- Dental Providers
- Family Caregivers
- Medical Imaging Workers
- Medical Laboratory Technologists
- Mental Health Workers
- Non-traditional Health Workers
- Nurse Practitioners*
- Nurse Specialists*
- Nurses - Licensed Practical
- Nurses - Registered
- Occupational Therapists
- Paramedics
- Personal Support Workers
- Pharmacy Workers
- Physical Therapists
- Physicians - Emergency
- Physicians - Intensive Care
- Physicians - Primary/Family
- Physicians - Specialists
- Public Health Workers
- Respiratory Therapists
- Social Workers
- Speech/Language Pathologists
- Other Health Care Workers
- Critical Care
- Diagnostic Services
- Emergency Medical Services
- Hospitals
- Indigenous Health Services
- Long-Term Care
- Mental Health Services
- Primary Health Care
- Urban/Suburban
- Rural
- Remote
Research Intervention - outcome data available
Christina Bova
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians
613-523-3343 x17
Canada
Canada