Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Doctors Getting Smaller Payment Increases, Doctors Per Person Rising: Institute

The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2019 02:01 AM

    OTTAWA — The Canadian Institute for Health Information says doctors in Canada are seeing smaller payment increases at the same time that the number of doctors per Canadian is rising.

     

    The not-for-profit says that in 2016-2017, total gross clinical payments to physicians increased 2.8 per cent to $26.4 billion.


    That's the lowest single-year increase since the organization started collecting data in 2000.


    In the same year, the average payments to physicians remained "virtually unchanged" at $342,000, or a 0.6 per cent increase over the previous year.


    The institute says gross clinical pay covers the cost of running a practice for most physicians, so it should not be considered equal to take-home pay.


    Meanwhile, it says the number of doctors per Canadian increased for the 11th consecutive year.


    The number of doctors grew by more than double the rate of the general population between 2013 and 2017, with 11.5 per cent more doctors and 4.6 per cent population growth.


    "Over the last few years, we've seen an increasing number of physicians per person and slowed growth in average gross clinical payments across the country," Geoff Ballinger, CIHI's physician information manager said in a statement.


    "To optimize efficiency and ensure that health care is sustainable, the provinces and territories can use our information to help determine the proper balance of physician supply and payments needed to best serve their populations."


    The institute's report released Thursday shows more details of the change in payments and workforce.


    Average gross clinical payments ranged from $274,000 in Newfoundland and Labrador to $386,000 in Alberta in 2016-2017.


    Those payments decreased for family doctors by just under one per cent to $277,000, while medical and surgical specialists saw them rise by about one per cent to $357,000 and $477,000, respectively.


    The number of female physicians is growing faster than male physicians, it says.


    And about 30 per cent of family doctors and 22.5 per cent of specialists received medical degrees outside of Canada, with almost one third graduating from South Africa, India and the United Kingdom.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Member Discharged Firearm At Suspect In Dieppe Incident: Police

    RCMP Member Discharged Firearm At Suspect In Dieppe Incident: Police
    Sgt. Nick Arbour declined to say if the 25-year-old Nova Scotian woman was shot, but confirmed that she was sent to hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.    

    RCMP Member Discharged Firearm At Suspect In Dieppe Incident: Police

    Ottawa Man Facing Child Pornography Charges Following Mission Trip To Nepal

    Police say the suspect was stopped by Canada Border Services Agency officers in mid-December when he returned to Canada after the mission.

    Ottawa Man Facing Child Pornography Charges Following Mission Trip To Nepal

    Cash-Handling Machines Being Upgraded To Handle New $10 Viola Desmond Bills

    Cash-Handling Machines Being Upgraded To Handle New $10 Viola Desmond Bills
    Ensuring vending and other machines can read the new polymer note requires a software upgrade for each device.

    Cash-Handling Machines Being Upgraded To Handle New $10 Viola Desmond Bills

    Vancouver'S First Two Licensed Marijuana Retailers Open For Business

    Vancouver'S First Two Licensed Marijuana Retailers Open For Business
    The quicker that others can transition to the legal market the way he did, the better, he said — the remainder will be dealt with in time.

    Vancouver'S First Two Licensed Marijuana Retailers Open For Business

    B.C. Police Officers Detained In Cuba Have Returned Home, Their Families Say

    The families of Mark Simms with the Vancouver police and Jordan Long of nearby Port Moody say they have "profound gratitude" for the two men's return to Canadian soil.

    B.C. Police Officers Detained In Cuba Have Returned Home, Their Families Say

    Global Affairs Acknowledges Quebecer Edith Blais May Have Been Kidnapped: Report

    Radio-Canada reports that the federal government is not ruling out the possibility that a Quebec woman and her Italian friend may have been abducted in west Africa.  

    Global Affairs Acknowledges Quebecer Edith Blais May Have Been Kidnapped: Report