Historic investments to be delivered through Dr. Jane Philpott’s Primary Care Action Plan
The Ontario government is investing $1.8 billion to connect two million more people to a publicly funded family doctor or primary care team within four years, which will achieve the government’s goal of connecting everyone in the province to a family doctor or primary care team. This investment includes $1.4 billion in new funding, alongside more than $400 million in already-approved funding for primary care.
“Through our government’s record investments in primary care, we have been able to achieve the highest rate of access to regular health care providers in the country,” said Sylvia Jones, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health. “With this historic, transformative investment, we can now achieve our goal of connecting every person in the province who wants a primary care provider.”
Ontario’s Primary Care Action Team, led by Dr. Jane Philpott, will use the government’s historic investment to implement its action plan to build a primary care system that draws on best-in-class models from across the province and connects everyone to a family doctor or primary care team. Interprofessional primary care teams are made up of a family physician or nurse practitioner and other health care professionals such as nurses, physician assistants, social workers, dieticians and more.
“Together we will build a primary care system that is comprehensive, convenient, and connected for every single person in Ontario,” said Dr. Jane Philpott. “In every community, your primary care team will be your front door to care, where you have a team of clinicians providing care you can access in a timely way, close to home.”
Since 2018, Ontario has added over 15,000 new physicians to its health-care workforce, including a 10 per cent increase in family doctors. Through the Your Health plan, Ontario invested $110 million in primary care teams across the province, helping to connect 328,000 more people to primary care close to home. Ontario has also opened two new medical schools and increased the number of medical school seats to add 260 undergraduate seats and 80 undergraduate seats at York University, as well as 449 postgraduate positions and 102 postgraduate positions at York University.
As a next step, Ontario’s Primary Care Action Plan will implement a broad series of initiatives in collaboration with primary care leaders and health system partners that will close the gap for the remaining 10 per cent of people in the province in need of primary care by 2029. Key initiatives include:
Connecting You to a Primary Care Team
Making Primary Care More Connected and Convenient
Supporting Primary Care Providers
Closing the Gap
Through the action plan, two million more people will be connected to primary care by 2029.
2025-26 | 2026-27 | 2027-28 | 2028-29 | Total | |
New people attached | 300,000 | +500,000 | +600,000 | +600,000 | 2,000,000 |
New primary care teams added | 76 | +73 | +78 | +78 | 305 |
Through Your Health: A Plan for Connected and Convenient Care, the Ontario government continues to take bold and decisive action to grow the province’s highly-skilled health care workforce and ensure people and their families have access to high-quality care closer to home for generations to come.