Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Honourable committee members, I thank you for the opportunity to appear today before this committee to discuss the critically important topic of health workforce recruitment and retention.
My name is Guylaine Lefebvre. I am the executive director of the Office of Membership, Engagement and Programs at the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.
I join this meeting today from Ottawa and the traditional, unceded, unsurrendered territory of the Anishinabe Algonquin nation.
I have been a specialist physician for 30 years. My specialty is obstetrics-gynecology. I have participated as an educator and a leader at many levels of our health care system.
The Royal College, its governing council, our president Dr. Richard Reznick and our CEO Dr. Susan Moffatt-Bruce remain committed to physician burnout and wellness issues. I offer regrets from our CEO who cannot join today. Dr. Moffatt-Bruce is committed to this important work in her capacity as a clinician-researcher as well as her position of CEO at the college.
We represent more than 50,000 physicians and surgeons across the country.
Health care, at its core, is about people. Healthy, supported health workers will result in healthier patients and healthier communities across Canada.
I am grateful to this committee for its commitment to addressing issues relating to recruitment and retention in the health workforce. I'd like to share with you what we've heard and what we know from our fellows, our residents and their colleagues in the health workforce, and what we're doing to support them.
I am also grateful to the government for the passage of Bill C‑3, which protects health care workers from intimidation that they increasingly face in the course of trying to provide care for patients.
While the Royal College represents 50,000 specialist physicians and surgeons across Canada, we're not working alone on this issue. We're working in collaboration with other key stakeholders in health care including the membership of the Canadian Medical Forum with its physician resource planning working group and HEAL—Organizations for Health Action—which represents health care workers from over 40 organizations and disciplines.
We cannot work independently from a system that relies on a team of health care workers, from nurses in the operating room and in recovery to environmental teams that maintain the hospital rooms and clerical staff that look after the entire patient journey. Our physicians are only one piece of the care puzzle, which should always have the patient at the centre of the team.
One in two physicians shows signs of advanced burnout. In late stages of burnout, physicians often lose a sense of professional accomplishment and can contemplate leaving the profession. That's a red flag for all of us.
Throughout the COVID‑19 pandemic, health care workers have stepped up. They have come out of retirement, delayed retirement, worked extra hours, all to keep our families, friends and neighbours healthy.
In a recent story published by CTV, an internal medicine and COVID-19 unit physician explained, “We're going to get to a point where we have skeleton crews everywhere, which is not the way a health-care system can survive.... I would argue that we're not surviving now. We're just barely getting by.”
The reality is that we haven't paid the full price of the COVID pandemic and that day is coming.
Burnout, exhaustion, delayed retirements and harassment of health care workers will all result in people leaving these professions and leaving us short of health care workers at a time when there is a tremendous backlog of procedures and care to be provided.
The demands on the health workforce will only increase and we may not have enough people left to provide the care.
We must also recognize that those who remain in the health care sector are stressed, exhausted and have experienced moral distress and moral injury. During the pandemic, health care professionals have been forced into challenging conditions and have had to make impossible decisions. The pandemic has brought to light many issues that already existed in our health care system and have been exacerbated in the last two years.
This means they're worn so thin that it becomes challenging to offer the type of compassionate care that we all want for ourselves and our families. Health workers who are exhausted and burnt out also don't find the same joy and gratification in seeing their patients do well.
As a surgeon, I am intimately familiar with the hardship of knowing that a patient is suffering and needs surgery, but there is no availability of OR time to proceed. The empathy we carry for the patient's pain, the workload of exploring options for care and the challenges of keeping waiting lists all contribute to the moral distress we see with our physicians. Access to care and waiting lists through COVID have gotten even more difficult to manage, but they have been troublesome for years.
In March 2020, Dr. Mamta Gautam, a psychiatrist, offered to hold daily Zoom calls to offer peer support to colleagues across the country. She had approximately 2,000 physicians contact her to join the group. In the first few weeks, between 30 and 50 physicians on average would tune in to the Zoom call each day. That number sometimes reached 80. In addition, according to a recently released survey by the Canadian Medical Association, nearly half of physicians are presently contemplating reducing their workload.
The good news is that together we can effect change. Studies have shown that to reduce the incidence of burnout, improve resilience and ultimately improve patient outcomes, a health system must identify and prioritize a commitment and dedication of resources to support health care professionals. Our colleagues at the Canadian Medical Association have created a physician wellness hub, which is one such resource to support physicians in prioritizing their own health.
Data is a resource that governments can use to understand the current composition of its health workforce to move our system forward from the pandemic. There are existing health workforce datasets, but these are typically limited to a single jurisdiction, based on self-reporting or for-profit databases that were not designed for health workforce planning.
There are also critical data gaps in existing workforce datasets, such as a lack of information related to equity, diversity and inclusion. Cultivating a health care workforce that is representative of the population it serves is critical to ensure the best health care for all Canadians.