Abstract
Objective To determine the extent to which family physicians closed their doors altogether or for in-person visits during the pandemic, their future practice intentions, and related factors. Design Cross-sectional survey. Setting Six geographic areas in Toronto, Ont, aligned with Ontario Health Team regions. Participants Family doctors practising office-based, comprehensive family medicine. Main outcome measures Practice operations in January 2021, use of virtual care, and future plans. Results Of the 1016 (85.7%) individuals who responded to the survey, 99.7% (1001 of 1004) indicated their practices were open in January 2021, with 94.8% (928 of 979) seeing patients in person and 30.8% (264 of 856) providing in-person care to patients reporting COVID-19 symptoms. Respondents estimated spending 58.2% of clinical care time on telephone visits, 5.8% on video appointments, and 7.5% on e-mail or secure messaging. Among respondents, 17.5% (77 of 439) were planning to close their existing practices in the next 5 years. There were higher proportions of physicians who worked alone in clinics among those who did not see patients in person (27.6% no vs 12.4% yes, P
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CITATION STYLE
Kiran, T., Wang, R., Handford, C., Laraya, N., Eissa, A., Pariser, P., … Pedersen, C. (2022). Family physician practice patterns during COVID-19 and future intentions. Canadian Family Physician, 68(11), 836–846. https://doi.org/10.46747/cfp.6811836
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