It's reassuring to know that. My husband has his doctor in his city but when I move up there we will relocate and both be without doctors. I did tell him do not leave the doctors practice without first having a new one in place wherever we live. I work in healthcare in the states and have a lot of experience behind the scenes, and we can get in to see a specialist doctor pretty quickly. Dermatology and endocrinology seem to have the most wait, around 3 months. Women do not need a referral to see an obgyn. Some emergency depts are just dumb as I speak from experience as a patient where I kept coming back days and weeks after my wedding because no one knew what was wrong with me. Turns out eventually after seeing a GI, and 4 procedures/tests later my esophagus and stomach were lined with ulcers. Great way to start married life (sarcasm). I am hoping we can actually find a family doctor because I need one for my conditions and I do want to get pregnant at some point where I would need to be monitored monthly, and it would be unsafe for me to be up there without any care or not have anyone write my medication that I need to take daily the rest of my life to stay alive.
Healthcare system works a bit different in Canada. Most specialists will want your GP to do a lot of the monitoring and even prescribing depending on the situation. The wait times for GIs are pretty ridiculous. Waited 6 months to see one and have been waiting for 8 months to see another without an appointment. I needed some good and senior GI specialists but there seems to be wait times at every GI specialist since my doctors were concerned and tried to get me seen earlier. Wait times are just normal in Canada and come to expect them. Dermatology is another one. Some things GPs deal with and there are some NP or GPs have specialty dermatology practices that try to deal with simpler excisions and stuff like that. Most immigrants are expecting the same level of access as to private systems where if you are willing to pay you get seen fast. Still feel very lucky to have the Canadian system but you must have realistic expectations. If someone has a serious chronic condition that needs some monitoring you really need a GP.