Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

New Program Injects 14 New Physicians Into Rural B.C. Communities

The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2015 12:06 PM
  • New Program Injects 14 New Physicians Into Rural B.C. Communities
VICTORIA — Fourteen internationally-trained doctors are fanning out across British Columbia as part of a program to provide better primary health care in rural areas.
 
A release from the Ministry of Health says all 14 doctors will work as family physicians in a total of 11 communities, and each has pledged to remain in the same community for at least three years.
 
Single physicians will set up practices in Dawson Creek, McBride, Terrace, Quesnel, Hazelton, Invermere, Castlegar and Powell River.
 
Fort St. John, Lillooet and Port Hardy will each welcome two general practitioners.
 
The 14 represent the first group to take part in the $2.8-million Practice Ready Assessment pilot program, where doctors trained outside Canada spend three months with a B.C. physician who evaluates their skills.
 
A second group of 16 doctors is slated to begin the program this fall.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver-area Mayors Propose 0.5 Per Cent Tax Hike To Pay For Transit Projects

Vancouver-area Mayors Propose 0.5 Per Cent Tax Hike To Pay For Transit Projects
Metro Vancouver residents will soon know if there will be a regional referendum asking them to approve tax increases for new and improved transit projects.

Vancouver-area Mayors Propose 0.5 Per Cent Tax Hike To Pay For Transit Projects

B.C. Christian Law School Loses The Support Of The Provincial Government

B.C. Christian Law School Loses The Support Of The Provincial Government
The decision by Advanced Education Minister Amrik Virk follows an October vote by the B.C. Law Society not to recognize graduates of Trinity Western University.

B.C. Christian Law School Loses The Support Of The Provincial Government

Delta Residents Worried About Flooding Relieved But More Rain, Winds Expected

Delta Residents Worried About Flooding Relieved But More Rain, Winds Expected
VANCOUVER — Residents in the British Columbia municipality of Delta breathed a sigh of relief Wednesday as their homes remained free of flooding, even as the public was warned to stay away from the shoreline.

Delta Residents Worried About Flooding Relieved But More Rain, Winds Expected

Breeding attempt with Toronto Zoo giant panda didn't produce pregnancy

Breeding attempt with Toronto Zoo giant panda didn't produce pregnancy
TORONTO — The Toronto Zoo says one of its star giant pandas isn't pregnant after a breeding attempt wasn't successful.

Breeding attempt with Toronto Zoo giant panda didn't produce pregnancy

Facts and key dates in Ashley Smith case

Facts and key dates in Ashley Smith case
Canadian prison authorities on Thursday rejected core recommendations made by the inquest into the horrific choking death of troubled teen Ashley Smith. Here are some facts:

Facts and key dates in Ashley Smith case

Feds response to Ashley Smith inquest termed `Orwellian`

Feds response to Ashley Smith inquest termed `Orwellian`
TORONTO — Canadian prison authorities are still looking at ways to cut the use of segregation and the time prisoners are forced to spend in isolation, the government said Thursday in responding to the Ashley Smith inquest.

Feds response to Ashley Smith inquest termed `Orwellian`