Thank you very much.
Mr. Chair and committee members, I thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today on the issue of scopes of practice and skills training of health care professionals.
The committee is to be congratulated for tackling this complex and difficult issue. Some of us before you today have been at this for 20 years, and we've been having this discussion for 20 years.
My name is Fleur-Ange Lefebvre, and I am the executive director and chief executive officer of the Federation of Medical Regulatory Authorities of Canada, or FMRAC. For the translators, it's one of the few organizations whose name in French is shorter
In French, it's the Fédération des ordres des médecins du Canada.
Unlike Dr. Moineau and Dr. Lemire, I am not a physician.
Our organization represents the 13 provincial and territorial medical regulatory authorities on both the national and international scenes. It's important to note that FMRAC itself has no regulatory authority. I must also point out that medical regulatory authorities exist in legislation. The word “authority” is not used lightly. They exercise their duty in the best interest of the public. Their role is to register and license qualified physicians and to provide oversight to ensure that physicians keep up their qualifications.
On the topic of overlapping scopes of practice, the medical regulatory authorities realize that there are in fact overlapping scopes, not only among the various health care professions but also within medicine itself. There are many different specialties and subspecialties. For example, family physicians, as Dr. Lemire has already pointed out, care for their diabetic patient, but they recognize and are expected to recognize when that patient requires the attention of another specialist.
Overlapping scopes of practice are probably unavoidable, and most likely even desirable, as long as the ultimate goal is to provide quality and timely patient care. Coordination of care is critical to eliminate duplication, and everyone needs to know their own limits. The bottom line is this. Every single health care professional who has undergone the requisite training should work to the limit of their scope of practice based on their knowledge, skill, and judgment.
On the issue of pan-Canadian standards, there are many such standards, all of which contribute to, and in fact underpin, greater interjurisdictional mobility for physicians across Canada. Higher education and professional regulation fall within the mandates of the provincial and territorial governments. Nevertheless, this country has a long and respectable, I might even say enviable, track record of developing, adopting, and implementing national or pan-Canadian standards.
In training and certification, I think we would all agree that flexibility in training warrants more attention at the moment, especially when dealing with multi-year programs like some of those in postgraduate medical education or medical residencies. We are all aware of the rather disconcerting unemployment statistics in the graduating cohort of physicians in recent years.
Others at the table this morning are better positioned to address those issues. The standards for registration and licensure, however, are the purview of the members of the Federation of Medical Regulatory Authorities of Canada. Medical regulatory authorities rely on the rigorous training and/or certification processes of the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada, the College of Family Physicians of Canada, the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, and of course we mustn't forget,
the Collège des médecins du Québec.
Medical regulatory authorities also rely on the national specialty societies to develop and promulgate practice standards within their particular medical discipline. Nevertheless, it is the role of medical regulatory authorities to ensure that a physician's licence to practise medicine is based on a demonstrated ability in a given medical discipline. While the physician chooses the discipline in which to train, what a physician can do and with which patient population is tightly controlled.
For instance, as has already been referred to by Dr. Moineau, a physician in practice may not choose to change disciplines without having to demonstrate competence in that new discipline. That often involves retraining. As well, a physician may not re-enter their original discipline after a period of three years away from practice without having to demonstrate competence again. The days of obtaining your licence for life no longer exist. In fact, physicians are now required to provide satisfactory evidence of their commitment to continued competence in their practice.
In other words, they must reaffirm in a framework of professional accountability that their competence and performance are maintained in accordance with professional standards. That is our position statement on revalidation.
I want to talk to you about our standards for medical practice and medical registration in Canada. We have developed pan-Canadian standards for full and provisional licensure. Both these licences involve the physician practising as MRP, or most responsible physician. This work was in part done to ensure compliance of our members with the federal-provincial-territorial Agreement on Internal Trade. While the AIT mandates mobility for physicians with full licence, it also mandates consideration of mobility of physicians who work under provisional licence if the receiving jurisdiction can accommodate the same restrictions and the same supervision requirements on that licence. Therefore, it is never possible to discuss standards without talking about the issue of international medical graduates. Most of them, if they come in on a licence, will have a provisional licence.
We define the Canadian standard as the set of academic qualifications that automatically make an applicant eligible for full licensure in every Canadian province and territory. Details are provided in my speaking notes. I only handed these out this morning, but they'll be available. The word “eligible” is used on purpose. There are other issues that come to bear when making a decision to license. For instance, we need to check a certificate of professional conduct and we need to check fitness to practise, and by that we mean physician health issues. We have also defined in great detail the screening criteria and standards for provisional licence. These are also available upon request.
One of the issues that I was told was of interest to this committee was telemedicine. This issue presents its own challenges as not all medical regulatory authorities do the locus of accountability in the same way. Some of them view the locus of accountability as where the physician is when the services are provided. I'm talking about when the services cross jurisdictions. Some of them view the locus of accountability as where the patient is when receiving the services. We have come up with a policy, which is also available in my speaking notes, that we hope addresses these issues, but we understand that one major jurisdiction that was divergent from the others is going to look at changing that, so those are the kinds of discussions we have in the hope that we can eventually come to the same standard.
Just so you know, we define telemedicine as follows: the provision of medical expertise for the purpose of diagnosis and patient care by means of telecommunications and information technology where the patient and the provider are separated by distance. Telemedicine may include, but is not limited to, the provision of pathology, medical imaging, and patient consultative services.
I want to talk to you a little bit about practice-ready assessments. The Medical Council of Canada is not represented here, but through its national assessment collaboration it is developing pan-Canadian standards to assess international medical graduates who may qualify to practise in Canada without further training, for those who are not seeking to enter postgraduate training or residency. As the Agreement on Internal Trade mandates mobility for some physicians with provisional licensure, as I stated before, it is imperative to establish standards so that each jurisdiction may rely on the rigour of assessment elsewhere in the country, because once physicians have obtained a provisional licence in one jurisdiction, they will most likely be eligible to apply for licensure in another.
Another area that may be of interest to the committee is our policy on disclosure of professional information. It's hot off the press. It describes what will be transmitted from one medical regulatory authority to another when a physician moves across to another jurisdiction or even another country, because we're also working on the international scene. The goal is to ensure that the appropriate information is available to the receiving medical regulatory authority to make a sound decision about that physician. Information about a physician's scope of practice is included in the information transmitted.
In follow-up to our work on revalidation—and Dr. Moineau already addressed some of this—we are working with several stakeholders to develop a system of physician performance enhancement. This will be a lifelong quality improvement and assurance system that has a demonstrable, positive impact on the quality of patient care and is feasible and sustainable.
The physician performance enhancement system will help physicians identify their own relevant learning needs, which can be addressed through education and can help improve the quality of patient care and safety. It will encompass all of a physician's roles and competencies—for those who rely on the College of Family Physicians and the Royal College—as well as each dimension of a physician's practice, so clinical, administrative, educational, and research-based.
I'll get to our recommendations. FMRAC believes that at the heart of scope of practice discussion is the issue of health human resources. We need to consider health care professional resources, including physicians, as a national resource. The training and regulatory frameworks for physicians and others support this way of seeing things as they develop, adopt, and apply pan-Canadian standards to these processes.
The role of the federal government should be as a facilitator or convenor of all the various stakeholders as we grapple with the very complex and shifting issue of health human resources planning in Canada and for Canada.
The federal government, most likely through Health Canada, and along with the provincial and territorial governments, of course, should take the lead as follows: (a) in being the convenor, facilitator, and coordinator; (b) collecting the relevant data in a comprehensive and intelligible manner; (c) encouraging all the stakeholders to engage in this process, as, for none of us, is it our main mandate; and (d) identifying success factors and establishing an ongoing evaluation matrix.
I know this is beginning to get repetitive. It wouldn't surprise you that we all knew what each other was saying before we got here this morning.
In closing, on behalf of FMRAC and its members, the 13 provincial and territorial medical regulatory authorities of Canada, I extend our appreciation to the committee and to the Government of Canada for your interest on this issue.
Thank you, and I'll be pleased to answer any questions.