REGINA — Inside the Prairie Nurse Practitioners clinic, a health-care announcement unfolded Tuesday morning that could have a lasting impact far beyond the city limits.
The Government of Saskatchewan announced seven new publicly funded nurse practitioner contracts, bringing the total number of contract holders across the province to 40 as it continues pursuing one of the most ambitious goals in its Patients First Health Care Plan: ensuring every Saskatchewan resident has access to a primary care provider by 2028.
"Expanding the number of publicly funded nurse practitioner contracts remains an important part of our Patients First Health Care Plan," Health Minister Jeremy Cockrill said.
"By awarding these seven new contracts, we are building access and delivering on our government's commitment to ensure every Saskatchewan resident has access to a primary care provider by 2028."
The contracts are part of a broader transformation underway in Saskatchewan's health-care system.
Earlier this year, the province removed its cap on nurse practitioner contracts and expanded opportunities for nurse practitioners to work independently across Saskatchewan. The Patients First Health Care Plan also calls for expanding nurse practitioner-led teams, increasing training capacity by 45 per cent and removing barriers that prevented nurse practitioners from working to their full legislated scope.
Those changes reflect a growing recognition of the role nurse practitioners can play in addressing one of Saskatchewan's most persistent health-care challenges: connecting patients with consistent primary care.
Unlike what many people may realize, nurse practitioners can assess patients, diagnose illnesses, order and interpret tests, prescribe medications, make specialist referrals and provide ongoing primary care management throughout a patient's life. Recent changes have also expanded their ability to practise more independently within Saskatchewan's health system.
Cockrill said demand for the program has been strong in both cities and rural communities.
"We now have 40 contract holders around the province," he said. "Certainly quite a few in Saskatoon, Regina and Prince Albert, but there's also a really good mix of rural communities around Saskatchewan as well."
The minister noted that interest from municipalities continues to grow as communities search for new ways to attract health-care providers.
"I got to think if you're a nurse practitioner in this province, you're in high demand in rural Saskatchewan and urban Saskatchewan as well," he said.
"There's a ton of interest from rural communities about getting involved and trying to attract nurse practitioners to come to their community."
That flexibility is one of the reasons the contract model has drawn significant attention from the profession.
Under previous structures, some nurse practitioners were limited by the availability of positions in their community. The contract model allows them to establish practices and provide publicly funded primary care in places where there may not have been opportunities before.
"It really allows some flexibility for nurse practitioners to practise where they live, where they want to, and provide the great service that we know they can," explained Toni Giraudier, president of the Saskatchewan Association of Nurse Practitioners.
"If there wasn't a position where you lived, you would have to commute or potentially not provide those primary care services as a nurse practitioner, even if your community needed them."
Research consistently shows that strong primary care systems improve long-term health outcomes, reduce hospital admissions and help patients receive treatment earlier before conditions become more serious. Primary care providers also help co-ordinate specialist referrals, diagnostic testing, chronic disease management and preventive care.
Giraudier said nurse practitioners are uniquely positioned to help strengthen that foundation.
"As nurse practitioners, we are part of the solution," she said.
"We bring advanced training, a holistic lens and a deep commitment to collaborative, compassionate and relationship-based care.
"We also have an intricate understanding of the health system and our ability to co-ordinate care within it improves outcomes and ensures patients do not fall through those cracks."
At Prairie Nurse Practitioners in Regina, that philosophy is already visible in practice. The clinic provides comprehensive primary care, chronic disease management, mental health support, diagnostic services and even home visits for patients who are unable to travel because of age, illness or mobility challenges.
"We care for patients from birth to end of life," Giraudier said.
"For those who cannot leave their homes — seniors, people with mobility challenges, disabilities or individuals recovering from illness — we bring care directly to them through home visits. That is what true accessibility looks like."
The province says the first wave of nurse practitioner contracts was met with overwhelming interest. Earlier contract holders were expected to provide primary care access for thousands of Saskatchewan residents, and the province has since committed additional funding to further expand the model.
Cockrill believes the impact is already becoming visible.
"You look at 40 contracts, there's a minimum of now 32,000 patients attached," he said. "And potentially more. If you didn't have a family doctor or nurse practitioner before, and now you come here and see one of these providers, that's a big win.
"That means you're getting better health care. That means you don't end up showing up at the emergency room months down the road with issues that could have been addressed earlier."
For a province still facing health-care workforce shortages and growing demand, no one is suggesting the work is finished. The government continues expanding physician training, nurse practitioner education, nursing recruitment and other health-care initiatives as part of its Patients First strategy. More than 50 actions are currently underway within the plan.
"Our vision is simple and bold," Giraudier said. "A healthier province where every person has the care they need when they need it, and we are here to help build that future with compassion, collaboration and unwavering commitment to the people we serve."









