Physicians urge Victorians to sign up for Health Connect Registry

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The Victoria Division of Family Practice is encouraging residents seeking a family doctor or nurse practitioner to register with the Health Connect Registry.

This registry is the central system that helps match unattached patients with available family doctors or nurse practitioners in their community.

The division has been working in partnership with the Ministry of Health to support patient attachment through BC’s Provincial Attachment System, which includes the Health Connect Registry.

Using the registry, attachment coordinators can identify those seeking a family doctor or nurse practitioner and connect them as soon as one becomes available.

“It may not be immediate but the registry is moving,” Said Dr. Aaron Childs, a family physician and Board member with the Victoria Division of Family Practice.

“It’s important that patients who are looking for ongoing care are on the list when attachment opportunities come up.”

He says that anyone seeking ongoing care should be registering.

Registration takes approximately 3 minutes, and according to recent BC government data, more than 164,000 people have been connected to a family physician or nurse practitioner in the Island Health region since 2018.

Being attached helps people stay healthier, receive consistent, effective care over time and avoid unnecessary hospital visits.

Registering also helps the health system understand the level of need in the community, and plan for healthcare resources.

It provides a clearer picture of how many people still want to be attached and what is needed to recruit and retain family doctors and nurse practitioners for them.

“Every registration helps strengthen the system for everyone,” said Dr. Childs.

For more information or to register, visit the health connect registry website here.

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Teresa Soto. Ted Huff2 days agoTop comment
We would love to have a regular family doctor. As seniors, we feel like ping pong doctors. Getting different answers and opinions is very hard for us.
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Tyler3 days agoTop comment
I've been registered on this ever since I heard it existed, in Oct. 2022 at age 38. I haven't had a family dr since the last guy retired, early 00s.

For the longest time I was skeptical of them matching me. After hearing they average 20k/yr over island health since 2018, I am now unsurprised I have not been matched.

At least they send emails now. Every quarter now they send an email, asks me to review & update so at least I know they didn't mis-type my email somewhere along the line with my registration sitting in limbo or in a bad state.

Pretty sure I'll be 90 before I get a doctor tho 🙄
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Andy Sibbald3 days agoTop comment
I have been on the list for some time and I know many others who have been on the list for years with no success. I don't know how ill one must be to access a doctor. I do wonder about the system. I am using Rocket Doctor and so my doctor was out of Toronto. When I required tests at the hospital I was told it would take eight months. A friend needed the same tests and had a Victoria doctor and was told they would have a test in one month-this without the severity of our health issues being taken into consideration. So it seems like being discriminated against for not having a local doctor. Ironically, we both pay taxes to support our health care system.
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Rory Dickinsonhttps://victoriabuzz.com/
Rory is Victoria Buzz's newest Branded Content and Lifestyle Writer, starting with the company in April 2026. Originally from Kamloops, BC, Rory graduated from the English department at the University of Victoria in 2020. He has previously worked as an editor for several publications, including The Kamloops Chronicle and The Albatross: UVic's English Undergraduate Journal. In his free time, you can find Rory at the beach, with some sushi and a book in his hand, thankful that he is not dealing with the weather in the Thompson Okanagan.
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