Representatives of family doctors in British Columbia say giving physicians paid sick days, vacation coverage, extended health and dental benefits and a pension plan is one way to help attract more doctors to work in the province.

The B.C. College of Family Physicians and B.C. Family Doctors published a series of requests for whichever party forms the next government after this October’s provincial election, including a call for access to basic employment standards and benefits like other health-care workers.

Dr. Tahmeena Ali, a past president of B.C. Family Doctors, whose term ended this June, says it can be hard for doctors to access high-quality benefits because each of them qualifies as self-employed rather than part of a larger group.

Read: New multi-employer pension plan coming for incorporated physicians

“If we want to encourage young medical students and family medicine residents to choose longitudinal family medicine, which is really the bedrock of our health-care system, we need to support them, not only with team-based care, but also financially through paid sick days and vacation coverage and extending the health benefits so that they are not taking a hit when they choose family medicine.”

Ali says a potential change could involve funding a professional organization to negotiate with insurance companies and create a plan that doctors can choose to buy into.

“There are 6,000 family doctors in [B.C.] and if a fair number of them were able to get into this benefits plan, then the cost savings on [an] individual basis will be extensive. [It would mean] not only cheaper benefits, but also a much more wide ranging [plan] versus when you’re trying to negotiate as a single, self-employed person.”

Read: Canadian MEPPs facing challenges due to provincial funding requirements, plan growth