After fleeing war in Ukraine, physician starts new chapter as U of T nursing student
After fleeing war in Ukraine, physician starts new chapter as U of T nursing student

www.utoronto.ca
After fleeing war in Ukraine, physician starts new chapter as U of T nursing student

Shouldn’t we be upset that at a time when the shortage of doctors means a significant portion of the population does not have a primary care physician, a trained physician who cared for patients in another country cannot practice in Canada but rather has to retrain as a nurse?
I'm going to suggest we shouldn't force her to do something she doesn't want to do.
Except the article also says that she tried to get accredited as a doctor but the amount of paperwork was simple too much.
She came here and wanted to stay a doctor but red tape made it too difficult. So she has chosen an option that still lets her help people. I’m happy that she’s comfortable with her decision but it wasn’t her first choice. She wanted to stay a doctor when she got here.
It’s a shame we make it so difficult for doctors to emigrate and recertify in Canada when we have a need for them.
Well, there's also the fact that she doesn't know the names of the vast number of medications (I assume that doctors here are expected to know both brand and generic names), and she may be used to different procedures and standards.
To work in Canada as a doctor she would have to undergo significant training just to be effective. Presumably there are few or no spaces for that kind of training in Canadian medical schools. It may also be that training as a nurse will give her the vocabulary and familiarity with the Canadian medical system that will allow her to write the exams and qualify as a doctor.
Yup. I had a co-worker whose wife was a dentist. She worked in another capacity at a dental office until she could pass the recertification exam.
He was caught printing no less than 400 pages of study materials for her with the office printer.
I suspect you were down voted because of your first comment about medications. It's less important than you may think. Pharmacists are the unsung heroes here, just like how engineers are responsible for making an architect's pipe dreams structurally possible.
This is actually a really complex issue, it's not just a matter of government will or changing a law or two.
Medical school + internship can be a 7 to 10 year educational process. The process of vetting all of that education occurring in foreign nations to make sure it meets our medical standards can be a years-long project in itself, which requires some level of access and co-operation from the foreign nation. This obviously can't be done on a case by case basis. Canada has undertaken this successfully with some other countries... which is why (in BC anyways) we are blessed with a bunch of really great South African doctors.
One of the big hitches is this: no country wants its doctors going overseas. It takes a somewhat unique case, where a nation has an excess of doctors perhaps, and where govt and medical associations agree they should embark on standardizing their medical training with a foreign nation and start exporting some of their doctors.
On the Canadian side, the biggest impediment is likely our own medical associations. They are the ones finally responsible for accrediting foreign education, which you can imagine requires a lot of diligence, and we don't want them rushing this process. We might ask though, whether protectionism slows them down more. They are a professional association, and they don't want to open floodgates to foreign doctors who increase competition and make it harder for their members to have profitable businesses - which would discourage Canadians from entering the career and only further exacerbate our medical shortage.
That was my first thought. Seems like a shame we can't just have another doctor, and that she needs to spend a bunch of money and time to retrain to a lower standard.