Number of physicians in Canada up 8% over five years
More women continue to join the workforce and physician pay increasing overall
"From 1989 to 2004, the physician-to-population ratio was relatively stable in
CIHI's study shows the overall physician-to-population ratio grew from 189 per 100,000 Canadians in 2004, to 195 per 100,000 in 2008, though ratios and growth rates varied among provinces, territories and health regions. Overall, the number of new medical students in this country increased from 8,236 to 9,640 from 2004 to 2007.
Physicians are getting older but retire later than other health professionals
Due to the length of education required to become a doctor, physicians traditionally entered the workforce at older ages than other health care professionals and tended to retire later in life than other health care professionals. Between 1978 and 2008, the average age of general practitioners (GPs) in
"The physician workforce in
CIHI's study found that many physicians who were older than age 65 in 2004 had still not left the workforce in 2008. The study found more than two out of three (69.2%) physicians who were between age 70 and 74 in 2004 were still working in 2008, and slightly more than three out of five (63.0%) physicians who were between age 75 and 79 were still practising in 2008.
More women continue to enter the physician workforce
Women are becoming a larger proportion of the physician supply in
The feminization of the physician workforce is expected to continue. In 2008, women accounted for more than half (52.1%) of new GPs in
Canadian-trained physicians less likely to migrate between provinces
Since 1978, approximately 1% of physicians moved within
From 1998 to 2008, Alberta and British Columbia experienced a net gain of physicians every year due to interjurisdictional migration, compared to Newfoundland and Labrador,
Payments to physicians increasing overall but continue to vary across the country
Across
In 2007-2008,
The following tables and figures are available on CIHI's website: Figure 1 Number of Physicians per 100,000 Population, by Physician Type, Canada, 1978 to 2008 (Figure 2 in Supply, Migration and Distribution of Canadian Physicians, 2008) Figure 2 Number of Physicians Entering Versus Number of Physicians Leaving the Workforce, Active Physicians, Canada, 1978 to 2008 (Figure 3 in Supply, Migration and Distribution of Canadian Physicians, 2008) Figure 3 Average Age of Physicians, the Labour Force and All Health Professionals, Canada, 1978 to 2008 (Figure 6 in Supply, Migration and Distribution of Canadian Physicians, 2008) Figure 4 Physicians Age 55 and Older in 2004 Who Remained in or Exited the Workforce by 2008, Canada (Figure 8 in Supply, Migration and Distribution of Canadian Physicians, 2008) Figure 5 Gender Distribution of Physicians, by Physician Type, Canada, 1978 to 2008 (Figure 9 in Supply, Migration and Distribution of Canadian Physicians, 2008) Figure 6 Percentage of New Physicians Who Are Female, by Physician Type, Canada, 1978 to 2008 (Figure 10 in Supply, Migration and Distribution of Canadian Physicians, 2008) Figure 7 Percentage of Internationally Trained Physicians, by Physician Type, Canada, 1978 to 2008 (Figure 12 in Supply, Migration and Distribution of Canadian Physicians, 2008) Figure 8 Percentage of Physicians Who Were Still Active in the Jurisdiction They First Registered With 10 Years Later, by Type, Canada, 1998 to 2008 (Figure 18 in Supply, Migration and Distribution of Canadian Physicians, 2008) Table 1 Total Clinical Payments to Physicians by Province/Territory, 1999-2000 to 2007-2008 (Table A.1.1 in National Physician Database 2007-2008-Data Release) Table 2 Average Gross Fee-for-Service Payment per Physician Who Received at Least $60,000 in Payments by Physician Specialty and Province, 2007-2008 (Table A.5.1 in National Physician Database 2007-2008-Data Release)
For further information: Media contacts: Angela Baker, (416) 549-5402, Cell: (416) 459-6855, [email protected]; Tonya Johnson, (613) 694-6610, Cell: (613) 296-2580, [email protected]
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