Ontarians dropped by family doctors say they should've at least been notified
CBC
When Tarek Emara called his family doctor north of Toronto hoping to book an appointment three weeks ago, he didn't expect to be told he was no longer a patient at the clinic.
"The receptionist ... answers the call and says, 'Oh, we haven't seen you since 2016, and as a result, we dropped you from your list and you're no longer at this clinic,'" Emara, who lives in Markham, Ont., told CBC Toronto.
"It's obviously very disappointing, I shouldn't be penalized for keeping healthy."
Emara is now among the more than two million people without a family doctor in Ontario, according to a report released last month. In 2020, 1.8 million Ontarians reported not having a family physician, a number that has ballooned to 2.2 million in 2022, according to data from Inspire-PHC, a health-care research group. Long-established research has found people without a regular family physician are more reliant on emergency rooms and are more likely to end up hospitalized.
Last month, Emara called Health Connect Ontario, formerly Telehealth Ontario, after experiencing vertigo. He said he was told to see a doctor within four hours and went to an urgent care clinic.
Emara said the physician at that clinic told him he should let his family doctor know what happened. That's when he called the Richmond Hill, Ont. clinic only to find out he was removed from their patient list.
Emara said he should have been "at the very least" notified that his family physician would be taking him off of the clinic's patient list. Now, the clinic is not accepting any new patients and he is looking for a new family doctor, he said.
"This shouldn't be happening, that you get unilaterally dropped unless you did something wrong."
Emara said he visits a private clinic once a year that is covered by his work insurance but otherwise had no reason to visit his family doctor since 2016.
According to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO), if a patient is absent from the practice for an extended period of time, physicians are first required to "make a good-faith effort" to determine whether the patient would prefer to maintain the relationship.
"In doing so, physicians must, at minimum, send a letter of inquiry to the patient's last known address," the college's website reads.
"Where no response is received, or the patient indicates that care has been sought elsewhere, physicians may formally remove the patient from the practice.
Almost two years ago, Cedric Hong found himself in the same situation.
Hong, who lives in Scarborough, called his family doctor, who he had been seeing for nearly 20 years, hoping to get a checkup. He was told the clinic removes patients who do not visit for more than a year, a policy he says wasn't aware of.