
A recent OurCare survey found 5.9 million Canadians lack a primary‑care provider, and those with one face long waits and rushed visits, driving emergency‑department crowding. The federal government responded by creating 5,000 Express Entry slots for international doctors, but experts argue the core issue is care‑delivery, not physician numbers. Singapore’s primary‑care system—offering patient choice, incentive‑driven Primary Care Networks, annual health plans, and region‑level outcome accountability—has reduced emergency visits and hospitalizations. The article proposes adopting a similar, coordinated, team‑based model in Canada to close the primary‑care gap.
Canada’s primary‑care crisis is reaching a tipping point. With nearly six million citizens without a regular family doctor and appointment backlogs stretching weeks, emergency departments are becoming de‑facto primary‑care outlets. While the government’s Express Entry program aims to boost physician supply, the underlying problem lies in fragmented delivery models that fail to provide continuous, coordinated care. Understanding how another nation tackled similar challenges offers a roadmap for systemic change.
Singapore’s approach hinges on three pillars: patient choice paired with smart incentives, team‑based annual health plans, and rigorous outcome accountability. Patients can select private doctors or government polyclinics, and physicians who join the Healthier SG Primary Care Network receive government‑funded nurses, care coordinators, and diagnostic services—resources solo practices could not otherwise afford. Each clinic crafts an annual health plan shared across multidisciplinary teams, ensuring nurses, dietitians, and pharmacists manage routine care while physicians intervene for complexity. Regional Health Systems are evaluated on metrics like emergency‑visit reductions and chronic‑disease control, with funding tied to performance, driving tangible health‑system savings.
Adapting this model to Canada requires policy alignment, funding mechanisms, and cultural shifts. Federal and provincial bodies could establish Primary Care Networks that bundle resources for solo and group practices, incentivizing participation through capitation payments and access to allied‑health professionals. Linking reimbursements to population‑health outcomes would promote accountability similar to Singapore’s regional benchmarks. If implemented, Canada could see fewer emergency visits, better chronic‑disease outcomes, and a more sustainable primary‑care workforce—turning the current shortage into a coordinated, patient‑centered system.
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