Donate Now!

NOSM Hosts Discussion with Federal Minister of Health

On Thursday, July 25, the Northern Ontario School of Medicine hosted a roundtable discussion with the Federal Minister of Health, Sudbury area Members of Parliament, NOSM faculty and medical students. Dr. Sarita Verma, NOSM Dean, President and CEO, welcomed The Honourable Ginette Petitpas Taylor, Federal Minister of Health, Mr. Paul Lefebvre, Member of Parliament for Sudbury and Mr. Marc Serré, Member of Parliament for Nickel Belt.

The conversation opened with Dr. Alexandre Anawati (Emergency Medicine Physician at Health Sciences North and NOSM Alumnus and Assistant Professor) speaking passionately about NOSM’s Social Accountability Mandate. Dr. Anawati stressed the need to reimagine how we deliver health care to meet the needs of Indigenous, Francophone, rural and remote communities.

Dr. Sarah Newbery (Rural Generalist Family Physician in Marathon and NOSM Associate Professor) spoke about the health human resource challenges and the reality of practising in Northern Ontario. Physician shortages have been a long- standing challenge in the region, and though NOSM is committed to resolving the issue, there is still much work to be done.

A recent report from the Canadian Institute for Health Information says the number of opioid related hospitalizations is higher in smaller communities compared to larger, urban cities. Dr. David Marsh (Addiction Medicine Specialist and NOSM Professor) stressed the need for more resources to be dedicated to supervised consumption sites.

Dr. Kona Williams (Canada’s first Indigenous Forensic Pathologist and NOSM Assistant Professor) spoke to the social determinants of health in the North and the impact of residential schools in Indigenous communities. Dr. Williams also spoke about the high calibre of NOSM medical students and expressed appreciation of their level of understanding of Indigenous issues.

Many of the inequities discussed during the roundtable are attributed to systemic challenges faced by physicians and reality of serving a population spread over a large geography with a low population density, including many fly-in communities.

Three NOSM medical students, Pierre Plamondon, Miranda Waugh, and Doniya Quenneville, shared personal stories of living and learning in communities across Northern Ontario.

Dr. Sarita Verma starts as new Dean of NOSM

Today the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) officially welcomes incoming Dean, President and CEO, Dr. Sarita Verma. July 1 marks the start date of Dr. Verma’s five-year term, succeeding Dr. Roger Strasser, Founding Dean and CEO of NOSM.

As first female Dean of the School, and only the second Dean in NOSM’s history, Dr. Verma says her first priority is to engage with the more than 90 communities that make up NOSM’s wider campus of Northern Ontario.

“My first order of business as Dean is to get to know the communities of the North; to learn what I can about them and their needs. It’s important to me that I hear from them how they envision the future of their health and that of NOSM in contributing to the solutions to current challenges they face,” says Dr. Verma.

Before pursuing her medical degree at McMaster University (1991), Dr. Verma obtained a law degree from University of Ottawa (1981). As a lawyer and a diplomat in Canada’s foreign service, she worked with United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Sudan and Ethiopia for several years, and draws parallels between that experience and urgent health issues facing communities in Northern Ontario.

“Our social accountability mandate extends to advocacy for safe, accessible and high quality health services including food, water, and housing security here in the North. NOSM’s next 15 years will be focussed on making a direct impact on population health in Northern Ontario in partnership with the Universities, the communities and the Health Science Centers.”

Dr. Verma is the former Vice President, Education at the Association of Faculties of Medicine of Canada (AFMC) and former Associate Vice-Provost, Relations with Health Care Institutions and Deputy Dean of Medicine at the University of Toronto.

Dr. Verma says she is inspired by her new role. “I am deeply committed to serving the people of Northern Ontario, to leading innovation in clinical education and research and building the next generation of Northern physicians and leaders for Ontario.”

New Acute Aortic Syndrome Guidelines Reflect Northern Perspective

A group of clinicians and researchers from Northern Ontario are leading the development of national guidelines for diagnosing and treating acute aortic syndrome. Dr. Robert Ohle, an emergency medicine physician at Health Sciences North and Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine, received a grant from the Northern Ontario Academic Medical Association (NOAMA) to adapt and improve existing American and European guidelines for acute aortic syndrome. Acute aortic syndrome is a condition caused by a tear in the aorta, the largest blood vessel in the body. Once the aorta is torn, blood can then leak up or down, blocking the blood flow to the vessels the aorta supplies, and depending on the placement of the tear, a number of the body’s essential organs.

Learn more about Dr. Robert Ohle’s research in the latest issue of The Scope.

NOSM University