RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Geographic variation in FP and GP scope of practice in Ontario JF Canadian Family Physician JO Can Fam Physician FD The College of Family Physicians of Canada SP e274 OP e282 VO 64 IS 6 A1 Elizabeth F. Wenghofer A1 Sophia M. Kam A1 Patrick E. Timony A1 Roger Strasser A1 Jessica Sutinen YR 2018 UL http://www.cfp.ca/content/64/6/e274.abstract AB Objective To describe and compare the scope of practice (SoP) of GPs and FPs between the rural northern, rural southern, urban northern, and urban southern regions of Ontario.Design Cross-sectional retrospective analysis of the 2013 College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario official register and annual membership renewal survey data.Setting Ontario.Participants All independently practising GPs and FPs with a primary practice address in Ontario.Main outcome measures For each of the 4 regions, we determined the distribution of GPs and FPs, the mean number of hours worked per week, the mean number of clinical activities reported, the proportion of GPs and FPs reporting specific clinical activities, and the proportion of time dedicated to each activity.Results The rural north has 2.4% of the province’s GPs and FPs, who on average report working more hours per week (a total of 50.82 hours a week) than practitioners in all other regions do. Rural northern and rural southern GPs and FPs report participating in more types of clinical activities than their urban counterparts do. The types of clinical activities reported vary across regions. For example, 13.3% of GPs and FPs in the urban south reported that emergency medicine was an aspect of their clinical activities, compared with 57.5% in the rural north. Urban GPs and FPs engage in fewer clinical activities and thus spend proportionately more time on each clinical activity than rural GPs and FPs do, indicating that clinical practice concentration and narrower SoP is more common in urban practices.Conclusion The SoP for GPs and FPs is not uniform across Ontario. Rural physicians work more hours and engage in a broader spectrum of clinical activities. Clinical activity variation was found across all practice locations, indicating that SoP is driven by patient and community needs, which vary from region to region. Our findings are relevant for rural and northern policy and program development in medical education, continuing professional development, and physician recruitment and retention.