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Labor Mobility for Physicians 2010: where are and where are we going. Presentation to CASPR Trevor Theman Registrar, CPSA. Objectives. Progress on labor mobility for physicians Implications for CASPR Issues for the medical regulators (MRA’s). The answers.
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Labor Mobility for Physicians 2010: where are and where are we going Presentation to CASPR Trevor Theman Registrar, CPSA
Objectives • Progress on labor mobility for physicians • Implications for CASPR • Issues for the medical regulators (MRA’s)
The answers • We have lots of work to do to be compliant and ready for September 1, 2010 • Movement from one P/T to another will be easy(ier)* • Who gets a license the first time is still the big issue
Background • AIT pre 2008 – fully qualified physicians were freely mobile • Government not completely happy, didn’t understand why registration standards differed, why some jurisdictions were more restrictive • Physician distribution a hidden problem
Background • TILMA (trade, investment and labor mobility) in AB & BC • Premiers agreed in spring 2008 to expand labor mobility for trades and professions • No consultation • Minimal understanding of consequences
Background • Predictable medical regulatory reaction • Concern about ‘a race to the bottom’ • Variable licensing requirements reflected the need to compete for physician manpower
The rational response • We had to get Government’s attention • We had to gain agreement among ourselves on the minimum acceptable standard for initial registration in Canada • We had to identify and address related issues
MRA work • Steering committee to guide our work on labor mobility • Registration working group • Certificate of Professional Conduct working group • Assessment working group
We have agreed to: • The ‘gold’ (Canadian) standard • Physicians will be registered on either • The Full Register or • The Provisional Register
Provisional registration • MD • Discipline appropriate PG training* • Evaluation by a recognized authority* • Success on EE or other accepted screening exam • Satisfactory completion of a practice assessment* • May include conditions or restrictions
We have agreed to: • Standardize procedures • Registration • Assessment • Supervision of practice • Certificates of professional conduct • Continuing professional development requirements • Quality assurance of a physician’s practice
Status: • We have come a long way, but we need: • Common registration criteria and procedures • Standards and procedures for assessment • Assurance that we will all follow the rules • In the absence of which, our option is to seek ‘legitimate objectives’
Implications for CASPR • Mobility for physicians will be easier post September 1, 2010 (within Canada) • Critical issues: • Postgraduate training • Getting an assessment • Success on the assessment
The answers • We have lots of work to do to be compliant and ready for September 1, 2010 • Movement from one P/T to another will be easy(ier)* • Who gets a license the first time is still the big issue