
N.S. patient says paying fees to obtain medical records after her doctor retires feels 'like a ransom'
It's bad enough to learn you're losing your family doctor, says one Nova Scotia woman, but being asked to pay hundreds of dollars to access years of medical records adds insult to injury. "We have already enough distress right now knowing that we're losing our family doctor," says Cornelia Schneider. "So on top of that, [to] have to pay … is really upsetting." Schneider learned her physician was closing her practice in the north end of Halifax in a letter earlier this month.

I'm a family doctor in Halifax. Here's why pay-for-service clinics will burden the public system.
I’ve worked as a family doctor in Nova Scotia’s public health sector for a decade. These days, I’m at a collaborative health centre in Halifax that offers primary care, dental care, mental-health support and other services. I’ve been watching our provincial system inch closer and closer to collapse since I became a physician back in 2013. It’s a story that’s now common to most other provinces, but Nova Scotia has its own specific problems: 14 per cent of the people who live here have no family doctor and, worse, a quarter of our working physicians are older than 60.
Deborah Purvis
A Mining Disaster Founded a Hospital

Tranquility Now

Annual Conference

Dr. Kris Srivatsa


Patients discouraged as Nova Scotia's primary care waitlist climbs to 137K
Breaking records can be a good thing but patients aren’t impressed by the record number of people on Nova Scotia’s waitlist for a family doctor or nurse practitioner. As of March 1, there were 137,587 patients on the Need a Family Practice Registry — representing about 14 per cent of the province’s population.

CTV National News: National licensing system
Physicians across the country are calling for a national licensing system for Canadian doctors. Creeson Agecoutay explains.