RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Focused practice in family medicine JF Canadian Family Physician JO Can Fam Physician FD The College of Family Physicians of Canada SP 905 OP 914 DO 10.46747/cfp.6812905 VO 68 IS 12 A1 Melad Marbeen A1 Thomas R. Freeman A1 Amanda L. Terry YR 2022 UL http://www.cfp.ca/content/68/12/905.abstract AB Objective To determine factors associated with having a focused practice among a sample of family medicine graduates in Canada and to assess the characteristics of FPs with focused practices and the range of services provided by these FPs in relation to the full scope of office-based care.Design Secondary analyses of cross-sectional data from the 2013-2014 Western Family Medicine Resident Follow-Up Survey.Setting Western University in London, Ont.Participants Western University family medicine residency graduates who completed the program between 1985 and 2012.Main outcome measures Physician and practice characteristics and the clinical services that survey participants provide.Results Completion of postgraduate third-year (PGY3) training was associated with having a focused practice. Focused practice FPs were more likely to be remunerated by fee-for-service, alternative payment plans, or alternative funding plans compared with non–focused practice FPs, who were more likely to participate in group payment models. Focused practice FPs appeared to be a heterogeneous group who were distinguished by being either an office-based focused practice FP (OBFFP) or a non–office-based focused practice FP (NOBFFP). Office-based focused practice FPs were less likely than NOBFFPs to have completed PGY3 training and more likely to work under a fee-for-service or group payment model. Further, the OBFFP group offered a greater variety of primary care services than the NOBFFP group, but offered less variety than non–focused practice FPs.Conclusion Completion of PGY3 training and payment through certain remuneration models were both associated with focused practice. Important differences exist between OBFFPs and NOBFFPs. The overall service provision of focused practice FPs was centred on specialized areas, especially among those practising in non–office-based settings. Novel findings from this study provide insights for family medicine education, work force planning, and policy making in the Canadian health system.