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Manitoba brings 13 U.S.-trained doctors to expand access to care
Summary
Manitoba has recruited 13 U.S.-trained physicians through its Health Care Retention and Recruitment Office and says those hires, along with expanded clinics and the medinav.ca booking system that handled nearly 50,000 visits last year, are intended to improve patient access.
Content
Manitoba has added 13 U.S.-trained physicians to its health system to practise in urban and rural communities. The recruits were brought in through the province's Health Care Retention and Recruitment Office. Officials say the hires are part of a broader effort that saw 285 doctors join Manitoba's system in 2025. The government also highlights expanded clinics and a new online booking system, medinav.ca, as part of the effort to improve access.
Key details:
- Thirteen physicians trained in the United States were recruited for both primary and specialty care placements across the province.
- Recruitment and support, including licensing and immigration help, are handled by the Health Care Retention and Recruitment Office.
- The province reports that medinav.ca enabled nearly 50,000 patient visits across Manitoba last year.
- The program has placed 58 physicians so far, including internationally trained doctors.
- Government data cited by the province says Manitoba currently has the highest rate in Canada for same-day or next-day access to a health-care provider, according to the Canadian Institute for Health Information.
- One recruit named in the announcement is Dr. Jesse Krikorian, now practising at Klinic Community Health in Winnipeg, who said the publicly funded system reduces time spent on insurance-related administration.
Summary:
The government presents these hires and expanded services as measures to make it easier for Manitobans to see a doctor and to reduce wait times, and it cites improved same-day or next-day access metrics. Undetermined at this time.
