OBJECTIVE To determine field of medicine and location of a cohort of physic
ians certified in family medicine between 1989 and 1991 and residing in Ont
ario in 1993 and to gather information on the scope of practice of family p
hysicians in the cohort in 1999.
DESIGN Responses to a mailed questionnaire sent in 1999 were compared with
responses to a 1993 survey of this group.
SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS All family physicians in Ontario in 1993 who recei
ved certification in 1989, 1990, or 1991 after completing a family medicine
residency. Seven of 557 respondents to the 1993 survey were ineligible; 29
3 physicians (53%) responded to the 1999 survey.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Field, location, and scape of practice.
RESULTS About 91% of the cohort were still practising family medicine, alth
ough 11% of these had restricted their practices to certain areas within fa
mily medicine. Physicians migrated from Ontario (6%) in nearly equal number
s to other provinces and other countries, predominantly the United States.
More family physicians offered counseling, shared antenatal care, and newbo
rn care in 1999 than in 1993. Those with restricted family practices provid
ed fewer types of services and were less likely to provide antenatal or int
rapartum care or to provide in-hospital services.
CONCLUSION Receiving certification in family medicine does not guarantee th
at physicians will remain in family practice 8 to 10 years later. Loss from
general family medicine to restricted practices within family medicine and
specialization was greater than loss from migration.