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PARO Announces 2019 Award Recipients from NOSM

The Professional Association of Residents of Ontario (PARO) honoured NOSM faculty and learners at the 2019 PARO Awards Dinner on May 3, 2019, in Toronto. Congratulations to Dr. Frédéric Sarrazin, NOSM Family Medicine Enhanced Skills Program Director faculty and member, Dr. Vincent Le, NOSM resident, and Ms. Sarah Cannell, NOSM medical student.

Award Details:

Dr. Frédéric Sarrazin – 2019 Excellence in Clinical Teaching Award Recipient
NOSM Faculty – Department of Family Medicine, NOSM Family Medicine Enhanced Skills Program Director

The Clinical Teaching Awards acknowledge the essential role that good clinical teachers play in the training of physicians. Residents are asked to outline the qualities that make their nominee an excellent teacher including patient care, quality of bedside teaching, and interest in the trainees’ personal development and well-being.

Dr. Vincent Le – 2019 Resident Teaching Award Recipient
NOSM Resident – PGY2 Internal Medicine

The Resident Teaching Awards honour residents who have provided outstanding clinical teaching experiences to junior house staff and clinical clerks.

Ms. Sarah Cannell – 2019 Citizenship Award Recipient
NOSM Medical Student, Phase 2

The Citizenship Awards recognize medical students who, in addition to maintaining an adequate academic standing, have made a significant contribution towards improving the general welfare of fellow medical students.

Please refer to the 2019 PARO Award Recipients announcement for a full list of all award recipients.

 

Dr. Saleem Malik, Internal Medicine Faculty Member, who represented the Postgraduate Education leadership at the event (top L) presented the awards to recipients: Dr. Vincent Le (top R), Dr. Frédéric Sarrazin (bottom L), and Ms. Sarah Cannell (bottom R).
Dr. Saleem Malik, Internal Medicine Faculty Member, who represented the Postgraduate Education leadership at the event (top L) presented the awards to recipients: Dr. Vincent Le (top R), Dr. Frédéric Sarrazin (bottom L), and Ms. Sarah Cannell (bottom R).

Dr. Aidan Wharton

When I graduated from Laurentian University’s undergraduate biochemistry program, I didn’t plan on going to medical school but I knew I wanted to work with and help people. I moved to Toronto to study to become a perfusionist*, but the more I learned about the cardiorespiratory system, the more I wanted to understand the bigger picture of health and disease.

I applied to NOSM because I support its social accountability mandate and its values coincide with my own. My experiences in northern and rural communities while studying at NOSM opened my eyes to some of the challenges these communities face in health care and beyond. This training left a lasting impact on my outlook on healthcare delivery.

I loved every specialty during my studies so family medicine training made a lot of sense for me. I have always wanted to be a “generalist” and NOSM did well to prepare me for this. As a med student, I found emergency medicine (EM) enjoyable but very stressful! As I gained more exposure to EM as a resident in British Columbia I came to enjoy the fast pace, interesting cases and significant positive impact I could make in patient’s lives day today.

I currently work full time at Health Sciences North in Sudbury as an Emergency Physician, and I work part-time in the Espanola Emergency Department, a smaller community hospital along Lake Huron’s North Shore corridor. I am also a Trauma Team Leader for the North East Local Health Integrated Network (LHIN) where I coordinate care for trauma patients across our region. It’s a rewarding experience and gives me the opportunity to work with multiple teams of professionals across Northern Ontario to help some of the sickest patients in the province.

Outside of medicine, I feel it is important to volunteer in my community. I do so primarily at Camp Manitou**, a non-profit summer camp for children and families on Lake Huron’s beautiful Bay of Islands. I volunteer as a Camp Director and other roles each summer during the youth camps. Working in that volunteer team over many years taught me that service truly builds community.

* Cardiovascular perfusionists are part of the wider cardiothoracic surgical team that operates the cardiopulmonary bypass machine during surgery, to oxygenate blood and circulate it back into the brain and body.

**Camp Manitou is a non-profit summer camp on Huron’s North Channel running 1 and 2-week programs for both youth and family camps during July and August annually. www.manitoucamp.org

Dr. Kayla Berst on studying, working and living in the North

Dr. Kayla Berst
I’m a graduate of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) and a family physician in Northern Ontario. As a medical student, I experienced what it would be like to work in the North and most importantly learned about the specific health issues that may affect my patients here.

NOSM is more than just a medical school; it exists because people like you, in communities like yours, believe that everyone—no matter where they live—deserve access to quality health care. Because of NOSM, my patients don’t have to travel to see a doctor. They have access to me—a homegrown health-care provider—in their own community who knows their history and how to help them. We work together to prevent and manage their health issues and to help them live healthier lives.