In Quebec: Improving timely access one clinic at a time

In this episode, we take you to Saint-Hyacinthe to see how a team in Quebec is transforming timely access to primary care. Quebec has more interprofessional primary care teams than anywhere else in Canada — yet it remains one of the provinces struggling most with access. So how do you turn a team into one that actually works? Dr. Kiran sits down with Dr. Isabelle Gaboury, a researcher and QI leader who, alongside colleague Mylaine Breton, has modernized the “advanced access” model for today’s interprofessional clinics. Together, they’ve coached more than 40 practices to redesign workflows, clarify roles, and use data to constantly iterate. Then I take you inside GMFU Richelieu-Yamaska, where waits dropped from 14–16 days to just 3. You’ll hear how receptionists learned to triage using a symptom-based algorithm, how nurses and social workers took on new responsibilities, and how the whole clinic shifted from working harder to working differently. It’s a story about change management, team-based care, and what it really takes to deliver timely, patient-centred access — in Quebec and across Canada.

Resources mentioned in the episode:

An article on why it’s so hard to find a family doctor in Quebec

Isabelle and Mylaine’s contemporary advanced access model

How Canada compares to peer countries when it comes to timely care

An older commentary from Tara that delves into why timely access is such a problem in Canada

A summary of Quebec’s data from the OurCare survey

Explore Quebec data from the 2022 OurCare National Survey at data.ourcare.ca or read this article

Visit the website for GMFU Richlieu-Yamaska

Listen to our 4-part series on The Netherlands (mentioned in this episode when discussing training for primary care nurses

MAINPRO CREDITS: Family doctors can claim Mainpro Credits by completing a linking learning exercise

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In Renfrew County: A hybrid solution to the rural family doctor shortage