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NOSM to Host 6th Francophone Symposium

Research at the Heart of Francophone Vitality

The Francophone Affairs Unit of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) is hosting the School’s 6th Francophone Symposium from April 5-7, 2018 at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario.

This symposium, a collaborative effort between NOSM, ACFAS-Sudbury (anciennement l’Association canadienne française pour l’avancement des sciences), and the Consortium national de formation en santé (CNFS) Laurentian University chapter, will focus on research in the Francophone minority context, with an overarching theme being Research in the Minority Francophone Context: Widening Our Horizons.

This symposium will bring together health professionals and community members interested in Francophone health. These symposia are meant to inform and promote networking within the Francophone population, as well as explore questions of importance and relevance to Francophone health issues.

NOSM was established with an explicit social accountability mandate to contribute to improving the health of the people and communities of Northern Ontario. As such, the School’s Francophone Affairs Unit encourages Anglophone community members to engage in this symposium as an introduction to the importance of Francophone cultural competency and to develop awareness of Francophone issues as they relate to health care in our region.

Through networking, small-group work, and discussions, the delegates will be updated on the Francophone component of the School, and learn about Francophone health issues and priorities as well as research initiatives and projects relating to the health of Francophones in northern Ontario and beyond.

We are honoured to welcome distinguished speakers, presenters, and researchers involved in health care, education, research, and service which respond to the needs of the Francophone population of Northern Ontario and beyond.

The program highlights include, among other presenters:

  • Dr. Denis Prud’homme, Vice President, Research and Scientific Director, Institut du savoir Montfort-Research
  • Jean Bartkowiak, CEO, Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre
  • Dominic Giroux, CEO, Health Sciences North
  • Diane Quintas, Executive Director, Réseau du mieux-être francophone du Nord de l’Ontario
  • Centre for Rural and Northern Health Research – Francophone Health Research Team

Delegates will also have an opportunity to learn about the active offer, with the official launch of a series of online learning modules for health professionals.

Sessions offered over three days will allow for networking opportunities, connecting with friends and colleagues, and learning about the health-related issues faced by Francophones in Northern Ontario.

Registration is now open. Please visit nosm.ca/symposiumfrancophone2018 for information. If you have questions regarding the event, please contact NOSM’s Francophone Affairs Unit, by email to affaires.francophones@nosm.ca or by telephone at 705-662-7260.

PLEASE NOTE: The majority of the sessions will be presented in French. Simultaneous interpretation will be available throughout the symposium in both of Canada’s official languages.

Inuit Youth to Participate in Nunavut-Based Health Careers Camp

The week of February 12-16, 2018, 20 Inuit students from six communities across Nunavut will participate in a Health Careers Camp. The camp’s home base will be at Nunavut Arctic College(NAC) in Iqaluit, with camp activities taking place at Qikiqtani General Hospital and in NAC’s simulation lab and classrooms.

Students from Arviat, Naujaat, Taloyoak, Clyde River, Pond Inlet, and Iqaluit—accompanied by a mentor from their communities—will have an opportunity to:

  • Learn about the many possible health careers they could pursue;
  • Experience hands-on clinical skills, such as putting on casts and suturing;
  • Meet health-care professional role models from Nunavut;
  • Receive safeTALK training from Nunavut’s Embrace Life Council; and,
  • Build a career planning portfolio, mapping out needed courses for the careers that interest them, in alignment with the Aulajaaqtuut element of the Nunavut school curriculum.

This pilot project is intended to promote health careers among Nunavummiut and is based on a similar health career camp for youth designed by the Northern Ontario School of Medicine(NOSM) in Northern Ontario.

The camp has been planned by a steering committee consisting of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Nunavut Arctic College, Nunavut Tunngavik Inc, the Government of Nunavut’s Department of Education and Department of Health. Logistics and evaluation have been coordinated by Qaujigiartiit Health Research Centre.

For information about the Nunavut Health Careers Camp, please contact:

Jennifer Wakegijig
Manager, Program Development
Northern Ontario School of Medicine
705-662-7296 or 705-936-6080 (cell)
jwakegijig@nosm.ca

Sidney Horlick
Research Assistant & Camp Coordinator
Qaujigiartiit Health Research Centre
867-975-2425
sidney.horlick@qhrc.ca

Summit Creates “Made in the North” Strategies to Strengthen the Physician Workforce in the North

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM), HealthForceOntario (HFO) and the North East and North West Local Health Integration Networks (LHINs) joined forces to host Summit North: Building a Flourishing Physician Workforce on January 24.

With more than 130 health system partners in attendance, the summit focused on solutions in the short and long-term to help build a sustainable physician workforce, with a focus on family physicians in rural and remote communities.

Representatives from communities across the North, including Indigenous and Francophone, were in attendance with those from hospitals, family health teams, the North East and North West LHINs, NOSM, HFO, the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, and the Ontario Medical Association.

A key objective of the summit was to gather innovative ideas from a wide-range of Northern stakeholders including health professionals and administrators, policy makers, the medical school and municipalities. The summit was the result of on-going conversations between the LHINs, NOSM and HFO.

Participants had the chance to learn about innovative health workforce models in other jurisdictions, the current physician need in the North, and findings on how to improve health-care access and equity for rural communities. Most importantly, participants took part in lively breakout groups, committing to actions to support the creation a robust physician workforce in the North. Furthermore, a commitment was made to create a broad based Task Force to ensure that the actions from the Summit are realized.

Building health workforce capacity in the North and introducing innovative models of care will lead to increased access to care for patients and greater equity for rural communities.

Quotes

“It is only through the collaborative effort of all system partners that effective solutions can be developed to address persistent health workforce challenges.”

  • Dr. Paul Preston, VP Clinical, North East LHIN

“The commitments from every individual and organization at the Summit is what will really lead to change.”

  • Dr. Sarah Newbery, VP Clinical, North West LHIN

“NOSM was created with an explicit social accountability mandate to help improve the health of Northerners and this event was really about improving patient access to care across the North.”

  • Dr. Roger Strasser, Dean and CEO of NOSM

“There’s an ongoing need to bring people together. We and our partner organizations are committed to continuing to work together to build on the momentum of this event.”

  • Roz Smith, Executive Director of HealthForceOntario

Dr. Roger Strasser, Dean and CEO of NOSM, interviewed Dr. Dennis Lennox– recently retired Director of Rural and Remote Medical Services for the State of Queensland– so that participants might see what can be learned from his experience and how is it relevant to Northern Ontario. Watch the interview with Dr. Lennox here.

Media contact:

Hugh Mullally
Manager of Communications, Engagement and Stakeholder Relations
North West Local Health Integration Network
Phone: 807-684-9425 Ext 2013
Mobile: 807-472-4281
Email: hugh.mullally@lhins.on.ca

Michael Ward
Communications Officer
North East Local Health Integration Network
Phone: 1-866-906-5446 x 5200
Email: michael.ward@lhins.on.ca

Dave Mackey
Director, Community Supports
HealthForceOntario
Phone: 416-945-5911
Email: d.mackey@healthforceontario.ca

NOSM University