Excessive paperwork ‘hurting with physician fatigue and burn out’ in B.C.
NANAIMO — The Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) is suggesting a path forward for healthcare reform in B.C., focusing on a reduction of red tape.
A closer look at a 2020 study from Nova Scotia showed doctors are spending more time on paperwork and administrative work, taking attention and availability away from patients.
Jairo Yunis, B.C. senior policy analyst with the CFIB said data from the Maritimes was ported over to B.C. and suggested doctors here spend a combined 2.6 million hours on unnecessary paperwork per year.
“That translates to roughly eight million patient visits annually,” Yunis said. “Some examples of red tape in healthcare the Nova Scotia study found was overly long, complex or redundant paperwork, duplicative and out of date processes, a lot of work dealing with insurance companies.”