Central Interior Rural Division of Family Practice

Central Interior Rural Primary Care Network (PCN)

Across BC, divisions of family practice and health authority and community partners are working to establish Primary Care Networks (PCNs). 

A PCN is a clinical network of local primary care service providers located in a geographical area, with Patient Medical Homes (PMHs) as the foundation. A PCN is enabled by a partnership between divisions of family practice, health authorities and our First Nations partners.

In a PCN, physicians (via patient medical homes), other primary care providers, allied health care providers, health authority service providers, and community organizations work together to provide all the primary care services a local population requires. Together, they:

  • Enhance patient care using a team-based approach to care.
  • Support each other and work to their strengths.
  • Further link patients to other parts of the system, including the health authority’s specialized community services programs for vulnerable patient groups (e.g., frail elderly, mental health and substance use).
  • Collectively increase a community’s capacity to provide greater access to primary care for people without a primary care provider.

Participation in a primary care network enables a patient medical home to operate at its full potential. In a PCN, patients get access to timely, comprehensive and coordinated team-based care, guided by eight core attributes:

  • Access and attachment to quality primary care
  • Extended hours
  • Same day access to urgent care
  • Advice & information
  • Comprehensive primary care
  • Culturally safe care
  • Coordinated care
  • Clear communication

When participating in a PCN, family physicians can:

  • Get what they need for patients quickly and conveniently from an array of services in the community.
  • Provide optimal care for patients with the support of teams, allied health care providers, and easily-accessed health authority services.
  • Access expanded services for vulnerable patients and those with complex health conditions.

For further information on the Primary Care Network in the Central Interior Rural area please contact Joanne Meyrick at jmeyrick@cirdivision.ca

CIR PCN Newsletters

For up to date information about the implementation of the Central Interior Rural Primary Care Network, read our newsletters:

PCN Newsletter - May 2021

PCN Newsletter - June 2021

Staffing Announcement - July 2021

PCN Newsletter - Summer 2021

PCN Newsletter - October 2021

PCN 2nd Quarter Evaluation Report 2021

PCN Newsletter - November 2021

PCN Newsletter - January 2022

PCN 3rd Quarter Evaluation Report 2022

PCN Newsletter - February 2022

PCN Newsletter - March 2022

PCN Newsletter - April 2022

PCN Newsletter - May 2022

PCN Newsletter - September 2022

PCN Newsletter - October 2022

PCN Newsletter - November 2022

PCN Newsletter - January 2023

PCN Newsletter - April 2023

PCN Newsletter - September 2023

PCN Newsletter - January 2024

CIR PCN Toolkit

Find more information on referring to the Central Interior Rural PCN staff, please refer to our PCN toolkit files linked below:

PCN Referral Form (pdf fillable)

PCN External Referral Process

Primary Care Social Worker (OMH & WL)

Primary Care Respiratory Therapist (OMH & WL)

Primary Care Clinical Pharmacist (OMH & WL)

Primary Care Mental Health and Substance Use Clinician (OMH & WL)

Primary Care Registered Dietitian (OMH)

Primary Care Occupational Therapist (OMH & WL)

PCN Organizational Chart

PCN Change Management Team

Cultural Safety & Humility Learning Opportunities for Providers

CIRD Cultural Safety Education Toolkit