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BC Medical Journal
Volume 49, Number
8, October 2007, page 426

General Practice Services Committee

Important developments in the
Subsidiary Agreement for Physicians in Rural Practice
The Joint Standing Committee on Rural Issues (JSC)
recently announced an important development in providing
British Columbia with one of the most comprehensive
rural support programs in Canada.
The JSC was established to enhance the delivery of rural
medical care and oversee the Subsidiary Agreement for
Physicians in Rural Practice (RSA). It is a joint
committee of five members appointed by the Ministry of
Health and five by the BCMA, and it has a mandate to
advise the government and the BCMA on matters pertaining
to rural medical services practice. The BCMA is guided
by the deliberations of the BCMA Rural Issues Committee,
currently chaired by Dr Stuart Johnston.
By agreement, the JSC is required to conduct a review of
its rural programs this year to assess their
effectiveness. The programs to be reviewed include:
• Isolation Allowance Fund
• Northern Isolation and Travel Allowance Outreach
Program
• Recruitment Contingency Fund
• Recruitment Incentive Fund
• Rural Continuing Medical Education Program
• Rural Education Action Plan
• Rural GP Locum Program
• Rural Retention Program
• Rural Specialist Locum Program
A request for proposals was put out to tender in July
2007 to solicit consultant bids to undertake the review.
Six interested parties responded, and we are now in the
process of selecting the successful bidder. As part of
the review, the chosen consultant will focus on five key
areas:
• Examine the strengths and weaknesses of existing rural
programs—identifying key opportunities and providing a
vision for the future.
• Evaluate the scope of services—determine what is
working well, locate areas that need improvement, and
identify any gaps in service.
• Develop recommendations on future program funding—this
would include areas in which more funding is needed,
programs where funding should be reallocated, and what
would be the most effective allocation of new funding.
• Propose recommendations on additional programs to
consider.
• Facilitate a day-long retreat to review all the data
and to receive and collate further ideas and opinions to
enhance rural practice.
Consultants will consider all relevant stakeholders
throughout the process to make certain that an accurate
snapshot of the programs is provided, while ensuring
that feedback and suggestions from all relevant parties
are gathered. It is our intent that the review process
will be fair, transparent, considerate of all diverse
opinions, effective in providing a clear vision for the
future of rural programs in British Columbia, and, at
the same time, remain within our negotiated budget.
The JSC is committed to ensuring rural physicians have
an opportunity to be part of this review by voicing
their concerns and making recommendations to the review
committee directly. All feedback will remain
confidential and should be sent to the JSC via
ruralreview@bcma.bc.ca no later than 26 November
2007.
For more information on current Rural Physician Programs
in British Columbia, please click
here.
—Granger Avery, MD
Co-chair, BCMA Joint Standing Committee on Rural Issues
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