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Canadian departments of pediatrics and family medicine: in need of family therapy?
Authors:Michael Klein
Abstract:Whether and how much the departments of pediatrics in Canadian medical schools collaborate with the family medicine departments in training for child care were the focus of a survey conducted in 1983-84. Responses to a questionnaire sent to department heads indicated that in general the most supportive relationships existed in the western provinces, with progressively more problems uncovered from west to east. The responses concerning the roles of pediatricians and family physicians paralleled this trend, with the western view being that pediatricians are consultants and not competitors for primary care. Many respondents supported the expansion of family medicine, particularly into ambulatory and behavioural areas. The data provide some cause for concern about the future health care of children, as the forecasted oversupply of physicians is likely to encourage competition rather than consultation between the two groups. Also, many Canadian pediatricians accept the US model of pediatrics, which includes primary care, although in Canada the ratio of family physicians to pediatricians is six times that in the United States, and Canadian specialists are concentrated in urban centres. This means that family physicians will continue to provide most of the child care in Canada and need adequate training. They also need to develop cooperative, supportive relationships with specialists in child health care to enhance appropriate referral patterns.
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