Government announcements are anticipated in early September. This email summarizes priorities for AFHTO, set through the ED Advisory Council (interview results and July 28th meeting), Physician Leadership Council (July 30th meeting) and AFHTO Board (August 12th). In light of government’s communications to date, the 5 priorities identified for AFHTO were:

  1. Developing and strengthening relationships with (and education for) LHINs, in anticipation of a tighter relationship between LHINs and primary care.
  2. Addressing the province’s intent to broaden access to teams while ensuring teams can continue to deliver quality care.
  3. Determining how to measure “Capacity” – a fundamental component in assuring quality care.
  4. Shaping what it means to take a “Population-Based Approach to Primary Care”.
  5. Strengthening governance of teams – a critical requirement for leading this next stage in primary care’s evolution.

Scroll down to read more about these priorities.

Stay Tuned:

What can you do now? Relationships are fundamental…start getting to know the FHTs/NPLCs in your region, think about how you could strengthen partnerships with the LHIN or how AFHTO might assist! Moving Forward – AFHTO will continue to engage our membership and keep everyone informed as soon as formal announcements are made or direction is received.  Working together we will identify and provide the necessary education, training and guidance needed to lead the way for comprehensive, high-quality, team-based primary care.

1.    Relationship with/Education for LHINs

All members – EDAC, PLC and the AFHTO board – as a priority to be addressed immediately, to prepare for the evolution ahead. Next Steps:

2.   Broadening Access to Teams

The Ministry has been clear on a shift toward improving “Access to team-based primary care for all Ontarians who would most benefit” – currently only a quarter of the population is served by FHTs/NPLCs and have access to IHPs within team based care. HOW this is done, lends itself to a number of challenges and potential opportunities. How primary care is organized going forward, the possible role of the LHIN, and expectations of FHTs/NPLCs will be key factors in determining how we can broaden access to team based care. Next Steps:

3.   Advancing Capacity Measurement

Team capacity has been the core issue for FHTs and NPLCs seeking Ministry funding to meet patient needs. As the province calls for broader access to teams, this will be THE number one issue – what can teams take on while assuring quality of care? Quality, capacity and total cost of care are the core concepts for measurement in the “Starfield Principles”, adopted by AFHTO. Through D2D 2.0, we have progressed in measuring cost and quality. AFHTO members, staff and other stakeholders are working to find meaningful ways to measure capacity. Expanding access to teams only makes sense where capacity is sufficiently developed. Next Steps:

4.   Population-based Approach to Primary Care

MOHLTC leaders have consistently used the term “population-based primary health services for Ontarians”. Working collaboratively to plan and offer programs and services that are designed to meet the specific needs of the patient population will be central to implementing a population based approach. Next Steps

5.    Governance of Teams

Given the Ministry’s anticipated announcement, strong governance and leadership practices will be even more paramount for FHTs/NPLCs to successfully navigate the upcoming transition and change. Next Steps:

AFHTO is supporting the development of an ‘ED Mentorship Program’ as a way to provide support and encourage knowledge translation for new EDs and EDs requiring additional guidance.

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