Calls grow to streamline licensing for doctors as health-care systems struggle
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — As Canadian health-care systems buckle under the weight of doctor shortages, the past president of the Canadian Medical Association is calling for a national licensing pathway for doctors — and some provinces are on board.
The current system, in which each province has its own licensing system, is confusing and bureaucratically cumbersome, particularly for doctors trained outside of Canada, said Dr. Katharine Smart said in a recent interview.
A national physician licence could provide a single, streamlined process for verifying the credentials of internationally trained doctors, she said.
“To have (all the) provinces credentialing every university, or every country, independently doesn’t really make a lot of sense,” Smart said. “It would make sense that would be done once, for the country.”

