News-Medical.Net November 3, 2025
Canadian Medical Association Journal

Living farther than 30 km from a family physician can negatively affect access to health care, found a new Ontario study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.250265.

Over the last 10 years, access to primary care has declined in Canada, and this decline accelerated with the COVID-19 pandemic. Even after moving, many patients reported continuing with their family physicians, despite travelling longer distances to reach them.

“Distance to health care services is an important determinant of health and can be classified as a factor of health care utilization, with increased distance a potential barrier to receiving care,” writes Dr. Archna Gupta, a scientist at Upstream Lab and a family physician at St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, Toronto,...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: Patient / Consumer, Physician, Primary care, Provider, Survey / Study, Trends
‘An exciting time for osteopathic medicine’ — growth in numbers, influence, financial effect
Osteopathic medical education: ‘This is an exciting time’
Around the nation: Amazon's One Medical launches new AI chatbot
Patient expectations in primary care: the structural mismatch
AAP Releases 2026 Child Vax Schedule, No Longer Endorses CDC's Version

Share Article