N.L. paying telehealth company more than twice what it pays doctors for consultations

The association representing doctors in Newfoundland and Labrador is looking for answers after it discovered the province agreed to pay a private telemedicine company more than double what it pays family doctors for consultations.
The Newfoundland and Labrador Medical Association found a contract between the provincial government and Fonemed among the province's online roster of completed access to information requests. The five-year contract, which began March 1, is worth over $31 million and pays between $82 and $92 for virtual care appointments with nurse practitioners.
Meanwhile, the province pays family doctors about $37 for a standard in-person visit and $47 for a virtual care visit, with a cap of 40 virtual appointments per day, the medical association said in a letter to its members about the contract.
"Like Fonemed, a family doctor's clinic also operates as private businesses with their own staff, equipment and overhead," association president Dr. Kris Luscombe wrote in the letter dated Tuesday, adding: "Family physicians in the province are already feeling overstretched and undervalued, so we will continue to seek an explanation from government of the large discrepancy between physician rates and what is being paid for non-physician virtual care."
St. John's-based Fonemed runs the province's 811 HealthLine, which connects residents with nurse practitioners who provide health advice. The contract renewed the company's previous service for the HealthLine.
Though the contract does not explicitly list the company's cost per call to the 811 line, it does specify that it covers up to 72,000 calls a year.
Using the monthly payments to the company specified in the contract, the medical association calculated that the cost works out to just over $82 per call in the first year of the contract. That cost increases each year to over $92 in the final year of the contract.
If the 811 service receives more than 72,000 calls in a year, the province will pay between $58.70 and $66.10 for each additional call, the contract specifies.
In his letter, Luscombe writes that the figures are "certainly surprising," given the rates paid to family doctors.
Newfoundland and Labrador has a population of about 525,000, and nearly a quarter of residents are without a family doctor, according to polling done this year by the medical association. Doctor shortages prompted intermittent closures of rural emergency rooms through the summer and fall.
The provincial Health Department said in an email Wednesday that the fees paid to Fonemed "reflect the overall costs to provide the virtual services," including overhead, infrastructure and technology costs, staff education, a 24-hour mental health crisis line and costs related to the HealthLine app.
The money also provides for virtual appointments with registered dietitians three days a week, as well as an outbound call service for people who left emergency departments without being seen by a physician or nurse practitioner, the email said.
The medical association noted in an email Tuesday that doctors also pay for all of their practice's overhead, infrastructure and staff costs through the money they collect -- including the $37 for an in-person visit -- through the province's fee-for-service payment structure.
On average, physicians spend roughly a third of their income on overhead costs, according to a 2018 report on family medicine in the province. That works out to about $82,496 in expenses each year, though in rural areas those costs can exceed $94,500, the report says.
The medical association said it is still seeking further explanation from the provincial government about why Fonemed is paid so much more than doctors for taking calls.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 8, 2022.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
How more than 100 women realized they may have dated, been deceived by the same man
An Ontario man is being accused of changing his name, profession and life story multiple times to potentially more than 100 women online before leaving some out thousands of dollars.

Mother charged with sexual abuse of toddler in Edmonton area after FBI tip
A Strathcona County toddler has been rescued from suspected sexual exploitation, and the child's mother has been charged, police said.
LeBron James becomes NBA's all-time scoring leader, surpassing Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
LeBron James is the NBA's new career scoring leader. With a stepback jump shot with 10.9 seconds left in the third quarter against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Tuesday night, James pushed his career total to 38,388 points on Tuesday night and broke the record that Kareem Abdul-Jabbar held for nearly four decades.
Biden in State of Union urges U.S. Congress: 'Finish the job'
U.S. President Joe Biden exhorted Congress Tuesday night to work with him to 'finish the job' of rebuilding the economy and uniting the nation as he delivered a State of the Union address aimed at reassuring a country beset by pessimism and fraught political divisions.
Fears grow for untold numbers buried by Turkiye earthquake as deaths pass 7,700
Rescuers raced against time early Wednesday to pull survivors from the rubble before they succumbed to cold weather two days after an earthquake tore through southern Turkiye and war-ravaged northern Syria. The death toll climbed above 7,700 and was expected to rise further.
Canadian military plane heads home after two surveillance flights over Haiti
A Canadian Armed Forces surveillance plane was heading home on Tuesday after two intelligence-collecting flights over Haiti.
On list of 50 'most Instagrammable' places, only 1 is in Canada
A new ranking by global travel site Big 7 Travel has revealed the most Instagrammable places for people to visit in 2023, but only one Canadian location, Banff, is among them.
Spy balloon part of a broader Chinese military surveillance operation, U.S. intel sources tell CNN
U.S. intelligence officials believe that the recently recovered Chinese spy balloon is part of an extensive surveillance program run by the Chinese military, according to multiple American officials familiar with the intelligence.
From $55 to $130: Which Canadians plan to spend the most this Valentine's Day?
As Valentine's Day approaches, many Canadians are preparing to celebrate by taking their loved ones to dinner and buying them gifts, but how much are we spending on this day coast to coast?