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Table of Contents
EDITORIAL/ÉDITORIAL
Year : 2022  |  Volume : 27  |  Issue : 1  |  Page : 7

President's Message. Rural Patient Transfer


President, Society of Rural Physicians of Canada, Happy Valley Goose Bay, NL, Canada

Date of Submission22-Oct-2021
Date of Decision27-Oct-2021
Date of Acceptance25-Nov-2021
Date of Web Publication29-Dec-2021

Correspondence Address:
MD, FCFP, FRRMS Gabe Woollam
President, Society of Rural Physicians of Canada, Happy Valley Goose Bay, NL
Canada
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Source of Support: None, Conflict of Interest: None


DOI: 10.4103/cjrm.cjrm_68_21

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How to cite this article:
Woollam G. President's Message. Rural Patient Transfer. Can J Rural Med 2022;27:7

How to cite this URL:
Woollam G. President's Message. Rural Patient Transfer. Can J Rural Med [serial online] 2022 [cited 2023 Jun 6];27:7. Available from: https://www.cjrm.ca/text.asp?2022/27/1/7/334310



Early in my career, I remember sitting in a remote northern emergency room in the early hours of the morning with a hypotensive, bradycardic patient. I worked to stabilise him, then called Cardiology in the referral centre located 2 h by air to the south. The cardiologist asked, “How do you know this is a cardiac problem?” Frustrated but undeterred, I spent the hours that followed racing to find an accepting physician and arrange a medevac. As a sole physician in the hospital, I should have been providing patient care.

What seemed like an isolated experience at the time, I now see clearly as a widespread problem: many of the medical transport systems in this country are broken. Agreements and policy between sending and accepting sites are lacking, transport programmes are frequently under-resourced and inter-jurisdictional transfers can be impossible to navigate.

The burdens of these inadequacies are borne first not only by patients and communities but also by providers and health systems. Existing infrastructure often leaves patients waiting in underserved areas for too long and causes stress for patients, families, and transferring physicians[1] and may lead to increased mortality.[2]

However, there are things we can do. In April 2021, the Rural Road Map Implementation Committee (RRMIC) released their recommendations for improving patient transfer.[3] These included the following calls to action:

  1. Adopt formal patient transfer agreements
  2. Implement no-refusal policies
  3. Create supportive intra- and inter-jurisdictional infrastructures
  4. Leverage the use of virtual care technologies to support more care close to home
  5. Use data to evaluate, improve and reduce the need for patient transfers and enable on-going end-to-end planning.


The Society of Rural Physicians of Canada is pushing these recommendations forward through research, advocacy and collaboration with our RRMIC partners. I encourage each of you to find ways to be part of this collective effort in your respective corner of the country and to help realise these calls to action.

 
  References Top

1.
Wilson MM, Devasahayam AJ, Pollock NJ, Dubrowski A, Renouf T. Rural family physician perspectives on communication with urban specialists: A qualitative study. BMJ Open 2021;11:e043470.  Back to cited text no. 1
    
2.
Moon J, Pop C, Talaat M, Boulanger N, Perron PA, Deckelbaum D, et al. Trauma in Northern Quebec, 2005-2014: Epidemiologic features, transfers and patient outcomes. Can J Surg 2021;64:E527-33.  Back to cited text no. 2
    
3.
Rural Road Map Implementation Committee. Call to Action: An Approach to Patient Transfers for Those Living in Rural and Remote Communities in Canada. Mississauga, ON: College of Family Physicians of Canada and the Society of Rural Physicians of Canada; 2021.  Back to cited text no. 3
    




 

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