Quebec order of physicians urges government to suspend controversial doctor-pay law
MONTREAL — Quebec’s professional order of physicians has called for an immediate suspension of a provincial law that ties doctors’ pay to performance targets and threatens punitive damages over actions that affect patient care.
In an open letter Friday, the Collège des médecins du Québec said it’s time to bring the temperature down between all sides, adding that its analysis shows that the law will have the opposite effect to what the government intends.
“The Collège urges both the government and medical federations to immediately cease the escalating rhetoric,” the order wrote. “The parties are no longer listening to each other, and this is the primary danger.”
Doctor federations have come out strongly against the law, adopted Saturday, saying the government is scapegoating physicians for the problems in the medical system, and that the heavy-handed approach will lead to an exodus of health-care workers. The government, however, says the reforms are necessary to improve access to care as 1.5 million Quebecers don’t have a family doctor.
