@article {Iglesias258, author = {Stuart Iglesias and George Carson and C. Ruth Wilson and Beverley A. Orser and David R. Urbach and Ryan Falk and Douglas Hedden and Victor Ng and Roy Wyman and Mark Walsh and Nancy Humber and Peter Miles and Jennifer Blake}, title = {Consensus statement on networks for high-quality rural anesthesia, surgery, and obstetric care in Canada}, volume = {68}, number = {4}, pages = {258--262}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.46747/cfp.6804258}, publisher = {The College of Family Physicians of Canada}, abstract = {Objective To describe the essential components of well-resourced and high-functioning multidisciplinary networks that support high-quality anesthesia, surgery, and maternity care for rural Canadians, delivered as close to home as possible.Composition of the committee A volunteer Writers{\textquoteright} Group was drawn from the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada, the Society of Rural Physicians of Canada, the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, the Canadian Association of General Surgeons, the College of Family Physicians of Canada, and the Association of Canadian University Departments of Anesthesia.Methods A collaborative effort over the past several years among the professional stakeholders has culminated in this consensus statement on networked care designed to integrate and support a specialist and non-specialist, urban and rural, anesthesia, surgery, and maternity work force into high-functioning networks based on the best available evidence.Report Surgical and maternity triage needs to be embedded within networks to address the tensions between sustainable regional programs and local access to care. Safety and quality must be demonstrated to be equivalent across similar patients and procedures, regardless of network site. Triage of patients across multiple sites is a quality outcome metric requiring continuous iterative scrutiny. Clinical coaching between rural and regional centres can be helpful in building and sustaining high-functioning networks. Maintenance of quality and the provision of continuing professional development in low-volume settings represent a mutual value proposition.Conclusion The trusting relationships that are foundational to successful networks are built through clinical coaching, continuing professional development, and quality improvement. Currently, a collaborative effort in British Columbia is delivering a provincial program{\textemdash}Rural Surgical Obstetrical Networks{\textemdash}built on the principles and supporting evidence described in this consensus statement.}, issn = {0008-350X}, URL = {https://www.cfp.ca/content/68/4/258}, eprint = {https://www.cfp.ca/content/68/4/258.full.pdf}, journal = {Canadian Family Physician} }