Summerside patients call on province to act quickly, after losing their family doctor - Action News
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PEI

Summerside patients call on province to act quickly, after losing their family doctor

After learning their doctor is closing his practice due to what he labeled an 'increasingly challenging' health-care system, patients of Dr. Hal McRae are calling on the P.E.I. government to step up and fix the problems.

'To lose a young, thriving doctor in the crisis we're in is unbelievable'

Women with grey hair wearing glasses and a black and white top holds a letter.
Bev Cornish was 'devastated' to receive a letter from her family doctor, Dr. Hal McRae, informing her that he would be closing his family practice in Summerside. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

After learning their doctor is closing his Summerside practice due to "increasingly challenging" issues with P.E.I.'s health-care system, some patientsare calling on the province to step up and fix the problems quickly.

Dr. Hal McRae sent a letter to his patients dated Feb. 7, sayinghe hadmade the "very difficult and heartbreaking decision" to close his practice on April 20.

"It has become increasingly challenging to care for patients within the current system, and for me it is no longer sustainable," he wrote.

The doctor's 2,100 patientswill be added to P.E.I.'s registry of more than 27,400 people already waiting for a family doctor.

A letter from family doctor Dr. Hal McRae telling patients he is closing his practice effective April 20.
Dr. Hal McRae wrote to patients in a letter dated Feb. 7, 2023, that he will be closing his practice effective April 20. (CBC/Steve Bruce)

BevCornish became McRae's patient four years ago after her original family doctor retired. She was devastated to receive his letter this month.

"The fact that he's not getting the support he needs to maintain his practiceis not good.It's wrong.The government needs to step up and fix this," she said.

"There's some serious issues there that need to be addressed. And to lose a young, thriving doctor in the crisis we're in is unbelievable."

Cornish has started a letter-writing campaign, urging Islanders to write to Premier Dennis King and Health Minister Ernie Hudson asking that the province provide McRae with the support he needs.

"He could be the turnaround for the health-care system, if we handle this correctly and support him in whatever needs he has," she said. "Maybe he'll come back."

Sign for Summerside Medical Centre
Dr. Hal McRae has worked out of the Summerside Medical Centre. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

Another patient of McRae's, Paul White, had a heart attack just a few weeks ago and said he's "absolutely blown away" by the newshis doctor is leaving. But he says the signs were there.

"I could see the strain on him. I could see the pressure on him. I worried about him, and I told him so," he said.

"If there was something they could do to help him, or something they could do to help all of us, make the system better for everybody; if they could make the clinics more structurally useful than they are, I think it would help the doctors, it would help the people."

Man with white hair wearing aqua blue long sleeve shirt sits, with one hand on walker.
Paul White is a patient of Dr. Hal McRae. He said he was 'absolutely blown away' by the news his family doctor has decided to close his Summerside practice. (Steve Bruce/CBC)

In a statement to CBC News on Monday, Health P.E.I. said it does offer options to "support and help physicians who have identified concerns including working through different possible models including joining teams, transitioning to part-time work, staffing support, and various other options that meet the needs of both Islanders and the physician."

The agency also said it acknowledges doctors have been challenged with heavy workloads and sustainability, and hopes to turn that around bydeveloping more of itsmedical homes, where doctors are just one part of a team of health-care professionals.

"We need to do more and do it faster,"Dr. Krista Cassell, thepresident of the Medical Society of P.E.I., said inan emailed statement to CBC News."Looking for more opportunities to try new things and ensuring physicians are spending more time on patient care and less time on administrative duties are two examples."

'There's an election coming up'

For White and Cornish, more is needed, and fast.

"The system needs to have an overhaul.I don't think the saying 'We're getting to it' is good enough anymore," said White.

"My message to the government is there's an election coming up, very shortly probably, and we need the premier to get on this, and get on top of this, and fix this," said Cornish.

With files from Steve Bruce