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Researchers highlight the critical role of Ontario's primary care providers during the pandemic

a doctor explains something to a patient in a primary care clinic
(Photo by Geber86 via Getty Images)

Primary care providers have a critical role to play in the pandemic – and improving access to that care is key, say researchers from the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table.

The researchers released a three-part brief (,  and ) this week detailing the work of primary care providers during the first two years of the pandemic.

The brief, , outlines issues affecting primary care in Ontario and offers lessons learned to improve access to primary care.

“The pandemic is not over, and COVID-19 is increasingly an illness that will be managed in the community, supported by family doctors, nurse practitioners and primary care teams,” said Danielle Martin, a clinician and teacher at Women’s College Hospital who is chair of the department of family and community medicine in U of T’s Temerty Faculty of Medicine.

“The Science Table wanted to understand the evidence base around the contributions of primary care to the pandemic response so far, as well as current strengths and challenges that will affect response to future waves. At this time it is critical to understand the lessons learned from the last two and a half years.” 

Core authors of the brief, which was concieved by Martin, include experts in primary care from across Ontario with a wide variety of backgrounds, including Imaan Bayoumi, Azza Eissa, Noah Ivers, Tara Kiran, Derelie Mangin, Sarah Newbery, Andrew Pinto and Kamila Premji. The team analyzed more than 200 articles for the research and consulted other experts broadly in its work.

The release of the briefs is the last official act of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table. Composed of scientific experts and health system leaders, the advisory table evaluated and reported on evidence relevant to the pandemic to guide Ontario’s response.

Research shows health systems with strong primary care have better health outcomes and improved health equity at lower cost, which makes an examination of the lessons learned about primary care in the pandemic a fitting capstone activity for the Science Table.

The three-part brief involves dozens of researchers and primary care experts from across Ontario, Canada and internationally. It outlines the evidence on how primary care clinicians – family doctors, nurse practitioners, pharmacists, social workers and other allied health care providers – took on new roles and worked more days to support COVID-19 care in addition to their routine clinical work, which includes preventive, chronic and acute care.

Primary care clinicians in Ontario assumed new responsibilities such as: COVID testing, assessment and isolation; vaccine counselling and delivery; and treatment prescribing, referral and post-COVID-19 acute care. They also aided other areas of the health system such as in emergency departments, intensive care units and long-term care, and assisted people experiencing mental health issues as well as poverty and food insecurity.

“As misinformation rises around COVID-19, primary care clinicians are highly trusted members of their communities – they are an invaluable resource for conveying fast-changing scientific developments around prevention and treatment of COVID-19 to the public,” said Fahad Razak, scientific director of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table, who is a clinician-scientist at St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, and an assistant professor in the Temerty Faculty of Medicine and at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health.

Ontario faces a significant challenge in keeping up with demand for primary care, the researchers note. About 1.8 million Ontarians do not have a regular family doctor, with new immigrants and people living on low incomes least likely to have one.

Moreover, 1.7 million Ontarians have a family doctor who is of retirement age. Compounding this shortage is the decline in medical school graduates choosing to specialize in family medicine. These challenges, along with inequitable access to team-based care, shape the ability of primary care to respond to future pandemic waves and support health system recovery.

Based on their findings, the researchers outlined several lessons learned:

  • Care provided in formal attachment relationships and through team-based models provides superior support for COVID-19- and non-COVID-19-health issues in the community.
  • In the absence of additional resources, COVID-19 response results in tradeoffs and unmet needs in other areas.
  • Innovative models and new partnerships supported patients to get needed care, but infrastructure is needed for sustainability, spread, and scale.
  • The absence of an integrated data system compromised the pandemic response in primary care.
  • Primary care can leverage its longitudinal relationships to achieve public health aims.

Martin says the ultimate goal of the work is to provide evidence to help decision-makers, including governments, professional associations and front-line providers, to improve the ongoing pandemic response.

“We’re in a state where we’re facing significant health human resources shortages, inequitable access to teams and uncertainty about the future,” Martin said. “My hope is that the crisis we’re facing will motivate all leaders in the system to look to the evidence about how we can best improve access to high-quality primary care for all Ontarians.”

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