RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Primary care in the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond JF Canadian Family Physician JO Can Fam Physician FD The College of Family Physicians of Canada SP 31 OP 40 DO 10.46747/cfp.710131 VO 71 IS 1 A1 Martin, Danielle A1 Razak, Fahad A1 Bayoumi, Imaan A1 Eissa, Azza A1 Green, Michael E. A1 Glazier, Richard H. A1 Grill, Allan K. A1 Ivers, Noah M. A1 Mangin, Derelie A1 Muggah, Elizabeth A1 Newbery, Sarah A1 Nnorom, Onyenyechukwu A1 Nowak, Dominik Alex A1 Premji, Kamila A1 Pinto, Andrew D. A1 Rayner, Jennifer A1 Smylie, Janet A1 Kiran, Tara YR 2025 UL http://www.cfp.ca/content/71/1/31.abstract AB Objective To understand the role of primary care in the COVID-19 pandemic to provide insight into its functioning and inform potential reforms.Composition of the committee The now dissolved Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table (Science Table) was formed in July 2020 to provide decision makers and the public with a synthesis of rapidly evolving evidence related to COVID-19. The Science Table was based at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto, and supported by Public Health Ontario.Methods Authors worked with the leadership and secretariat of the Science Table to synthesize evidence and inputs. Authors drew on their expertise in research, policy, and front-line care delivery and coupled this with data analysis and reviews of the literature relevant to the topic areas discussed. Data analysis and literature reviews were done with the support of the Ontario Medical Association, the INSPIRE–Primary Health Care research program, and the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Toronto. Experts conducted a rapid review of the briefs prior to publication, and authors presented the briefs’ content at a series of meetings attended by Science Table members for their input. As Science Table briefs were intended to provide rapid-response answers to important health system questions in real time, the intent was not to conduct a systematic review but rather to gather available relevant evidence and present it in a form that could be used by policy-makers.Report This summary describes the work of primary care during the COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario up to September 2022; outlines current challenges in primary care capacity and structure; and makes recommendations for strengthening the sector to better address population needs for current and future public health priorities. While the focus is on Ontario, many of the findings are relevant to other jurisdictions in Canada and elsewhere.Conclusion Universal formal attachment to an accountable interprofessional primary care team supported by adequate infrastructure should be the cornerstone of pandemic recovery planning.