If you get frequent or chronic migraine and your GP has referred you to neurology, you've likely met the same wall thousands of Canadians hit: the referral is the easy part, and then nothing happens for the better part of a year. Migraine is one of the leading causes of disability in working-age adults, yet it is almost always triaged as "routine" — which in practice means it waits behind suspected strokes, tumours, and seizures. This article lays out what that wait actually looks like, and — more usefully — exactly what can be started without the neurologist and what genuinely needs one, so the months in between aren't wasted.
The migraine burden — and why it gets under-treated
Migraine isn't "just a headache." It is a neurological disorder that, at its more frequent end, dismantles work, parenting, and daily function. Roughly one in seven people lives with migraine, and it is consistently ranked among the top causes of years lived with disability worldwide. Despite that, it is chronically under-treated — partly because attacks are invisible, partly because patients normalise them, and partly because the pathway to specialist care is so slow that many people simply give up and self-medicate.
That last point matters because self-medicating with acute painkillers, if done too often, quietly makes migraine worse — a trap called medication-overuse headache, which we'll come back to.
The Canadian pathway — GP to neurology, and the long wait
In Canada's public system, the route to a neurologist runs through your GP. Your family doctor assesses you, rules out red flags, and submits a referral. Then you wait. For a non-urgent migraine referral, that wait commonly runs 6 to 18 months depending on your province and region. The national median specialist wait is roughly 30 weeks total from GP referral to treatment (Fraser Institute, Waiting Your Turn, 2025), and neurology sits among the longer-waiting specialties.
The crucial thing to understand is why migraine waits so long: it's triaged as routine. A neurology department will (correctly) prioritise a first seizure, a suspected multiple sclerosis relapse, or a possible brain tumour ahead of a stable migraine pattern. That's clinically sensible — but it means migraine patients can sit at the back of the queue for a year while their attacks continue unchecked. For a province-by-province breakdown, see our master guide on neurologist wait times across Canada, and the regional deep-dives for British Columbia and Ontario.
What your GP can start now — without the neurologist
Here is the single most important thing to know while you wait: a large part of effective migraine care is squarely within your GP's scope. You do not need a neurologist to begin it, and a good family doctor can and should get you moving.
Trigger and lifestyle management
Migraine is heavily modulated by routine. The reliable levers are regular sleep, steady hydration, consistent caffeine intake (both too much and abrupt withdrawal trigger attacks), not skipping meals, and managing stress. None of this requires a specialist, and identifying your personal triggers — which the headache diary below is built to do — is often more powerful than any single drug.
Optimising acute treatment
Many people under-treat their attacks. Your GP can optimise acute therapy: an adequate dose of an NSAID taken early, and — importantly — a triptan such as sumatriptan or rizatriptan, taken as soon as an attack begins rather than hours in. Triptans are migraine-specific and prescribable by any GP. Getting acute treatment right often reduces both the severity of attacks and the temptation to overuse painkillers.
First-line oral preventives — GPs can and should trial these
This is the step most often left undone while patients wait, and it shouldn't be. If you're having frequent attacks, guidelines expect a preventive medication — one taken daily to reduce how often migraines happen. The first-line oral preventives are all within GP scope:
- Beta-blockers — propranolol or metoprolol
- Candesartan — a blood-pressure medication with good migraine-prevention evidence
- Amitriptyline — a tricyclic, useful especially where sleep or tension-type overlap is present
- Topiramate — an anticonvulsant with strong migraine-prevention data
A GP can and should trial one of these at an adequate dose for 8–12 weeks before concluding it hasn't worked. Doing this during your wait is the difference between arriving at your neurology appointment having already ruled out two first-line options — which is exactly what the neurologist needs — versus arriving having tried nothing, and being sent away to do it anyway.
Track every headache: the date, how long it lasted, severity, likely triggers (sleep, food, stress, hormonal timing), and — critically — how many days per month you take any acute medication. This single document does two jobs: it reveals your triggers, and it becomes the objective evidence that justifies escalation to a neurologist for CGRP therapy or Botox. Without it, those treatments are hard to access; with it, your case makes itself.
What genuinely needs a neurologist — or special authority
Some migraine care really does require specialist involvement, and it's worth knowing the boundary so you push for the right thing at the right time. These are generally the newer, more expensive therapies, and they typically become available only after first-line oral preventives have failed:
- CGRP monoclonal antibodies — erenumab, galcanezumab, and fremanezumab. These injectable preventives target the migraine pathway directly and are often transformative for people who've failed older drugs. In most provinces they require specialist involvement and/or special-authority coverage, granted only after documented failure of two or more first-line preventives.
- Gepants — a newer oral class used for acute treatment and, in some cases, prevention. Access and coverage vary and often route through a specialist.
- Botox (onabotulinumtoxinA) for chronic migraine — an established treatment specifically for chronic migraine, usually administered and initiated through neurology, again with special-authority coverage rules.
The common thread: every one of these needs documentation that first-line care was tried and didn't work. Which is precisely why the headache diary and a GP-led preventive trial during your wait aren't just "something to do" — they are the paperwork that unlocks the specialist-level treatments once you're finally in front of a neurologist.
What "chronic migraine" actually means
The distinction matters for access. Chronic migraine is defined as 15 or more headache days per month, for more than three months, with at least 8 of those being migraine days. Fewer than 15 headache days a month is classed as episodic migraine. This threshold isn't academic — Botox coverage in particular is tied to the chronic-migraine definition, which is another reason your diary's day-count is so important. If you don't count the days, you can't prove which category you're in.
Medication-overuse headache — the trap to avoid while you wait
When treatment access is slow, people reach for over-the-counter painkillers more and more often. But using acute medication — including simple analgesics, and especially combination products or opioids — on too many days per month can cause the brain to rebound into a near-daily headache. It's a genuine and common complication, and it makes everything harder to treat. This is the other reason to log your medication days: if you notice you're taking acute treatment on 10 or more days a month, that itself is a flag to raise with your GP, and a reason to prioritise a preventive rather than more painkillers.
Red flags that change the picture — when it's not routine
Most migraine is not dangerous, but certain features mean a headache is not a routine migraine and needs urgent assessment — sometimes the emergency room, not a waiting list. Seek urgent care if you have:
- A thunderclap headache — the worst headache of your life, reaching maximum intensity within seconds to a minute
- A new headache after age 50, or a distinct change in your usual headache pattern
- Neurological deficits — weakness, numbness, difficulty speaking, vision loss, or confusion
- Headache with fever and neck stiffness, which can signal meningitis
- Headache that is markedly worse when lying down, waking you from sleep, or worsening steadily over days
These features can indicate bleeding, infection, raised pressure, or other serious causes, and they override the usual "wait for neurology" pathway entirely.
The access gap — and where a specialist opinion fits
For many Canadians, and particularly for newer immigrants and the NRI community, the year-long neurology wait collides with real barriers: unfamiliarity with how the referral system works, difficulty advocating within a system that assumes you'll push, and no easy way to sanity-check whether their GP has actually done everything first-line before the specialist clock even starts. The result is people enduring frequent migraine for months with no plan and no clear next step.
This is the gap Ginie Health is built to close. You can get a written clinical opinion from a neurologist trained at PGIMER Chandigarh or AIIMS — among the most respected neurology programmes in the subcontinent — reviewing your headache diary and current treatment. Within 6 hours, for $45 CAD, you get a clear read on whether your first-line preventives have been adequately trialled, whether your pattern meets the chronic-migraine threshold, and exactly what to ask your GP for or push for at your Canadian neurology appointment. It doesn't replace that appointment — it makes sure the months before it, and the appointment itself, actually count. If you'd rather talk it through, a live video consultation is available for $75 CAD. No referral needed for either.