Absolutely.
I do think that this discussion around screening and health screening is an opportunity for us in Canada to think about more meaningful health care reform. We can think of what the evidence-based ways are that we can help save lives and about how we can skip that step outside of a primary care provider, because our family physicians are burning out. They do not have the capacity for us to be putting more on their plates by saying, “Now please have detailed risk-benefit ratios.”
With regard to government organizations, I'd really like to see the government, public health and provincial health providers providing screening programs that patients can self-refer to, much like what is about to start in Ontario in the fall, so that they can make that decision and then follow up with their family provider to review the results.
Trying to make family doctors continually be the gatekeepers to all medical care in Canada fails so many because, even in Ottawa, about 30% of people don't have a family doctor.