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‘What’s good about our relationships,
and how can we create more of that?

Noojamadaa: Helping build healthy relationships within Anishnawbek communities

Marion Maar, Associate Professor of Medical Anthropology at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM), together with First Nations communities of Manitoulin Island and LU Master of Indigenous relations graduate, Beaudin Bennett, has created Noojamadaa, an educational photo exhibit exploring healthy relationships in First Nations families and communities.

Before coming to NOSM, Maar was a researcher with an Aboriginal Health Access Centre on Manitoulin Island for eight years. Because of her longstanding relationship with the communities, she was approached about working on a community-based research project to address intimate partner violence.

Research has shown Indigenous women experience intimate partner violence at a higher rate than non-Indigenous women, with significant health and social consequences, says Maar, but many primary-care practitioners need to learn more about what their role should be in addressing it.

Maar says some of the goals of the research project are to understand the context of intimate partner violence and the role of primary care practitioners in addressing violence their patients experience at home, and what kind of training and resources they need to better fulfill that role.

She says the communities chose to begin the research through a photo exhibit exploring healthy relationships among the Anishnawbek. Participating women explained that in order to reduce intimate partner violence, relationships needed to be healed not only between spouses, but also with their families, communities, the Nation and the environment.

“It’s a difficult topic, and the communities decided that creating awareness was the first step,” says Maar. “The communities didn’t want to take a negative approach to it, or have Indigenous people reduced to a statistic. Communities asked: ‘What’s good about our relationships, and how can we create more of that?”

Randy Trudeau is one of the facilitators of Noojamadaa. A hunter, fisherman, trapper and artist, Trudeau says he wanted to share the healing power of building a relationship with the land.

After being approached by the research team to participate in the project, Trudeau agreed to allow a photographer to shadow him throughout his day to day life, taking photos to demonstrate how he has built a relationship with his environment.

“I find that throughout all I’ve gone through in my life, all the traumas, my healer has always been nature,” he says. “So I’ve dedicated my life to living off the land, living peacefully and learning ways to heal myself, and teaching other men to do the same.”

The exhibit has expanded to include art that displays healthy relationships, and Trudeau has also contributed paintings to the exhibit.

To date, Noojamadaa has been displayed in diverse venues, including at the Laurentian University School of Architecture, the Debajehmujig Creation Centre in Manitowaning, and the Sudbury District Health Unit, McMaster University and Queen’s Park. The exhibit is also accredited for continuing education.

The project was initially funded by the Women’s Xchange $15K Challenge, but additional funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) was provided to explore a holistic approach to address violence, trauma and opioid addictions.

“The CHIR grant will help us to increase collaboration and relationship building with all relevant service sectors, including mental health, social services, child protection, justice and police so we can better develop and coordinate roles of each sector in addressing intimate partner violence, and underlying issues including addictions, in a culturally safe way,” says Maar.

Read more stories like this one in the latest edition of The Scope.

Dr. Sandra Cameron appointed as Program Director

Dr. Sandra Cameron appointed as Program Director for NOSM Internal Medicine Residency Program, taking over for Dr. Kim Tilbe, the School’s longest-serving active Program Director

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Sandra Cameron as Program Director of the School’s Internal Medicine Residency Program, effective September 1, 2018.

Dr. Sandra Cameron moves from her position as the program’s Medicine Clinical Teaching Unit Director at Health Sciences North in Sudbury. Dr. Cameron brings a wealth of experience in structuring excellent clinical training opportunities for medical trainees, and has been a member of the Internal Medicine Residency Program Committee leadership since its inception.

NOSM would like to acknowledge the contributions of Dr. Kim Tilbe, the School’s longest-serving active program director, having held the position of Program Director of the Internal Medicine Residency Program for the past eight years.

After having started as Regional Director of the University of Ottawa’s Northern Stream program based in Northern Ontario, he took on the Program Director role for NOSM’s own residency program in 2010, leading it to become the School’s largest Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada training program, distributed across multiple Northern Ontario training sites.

“On behalf of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine, I would like to congratulate and thank Dr. Tilbe for all of his contributions to medical residency education, and welcome Dr. Cameron to her new leadership role,” said Dr. Tom Crichton, NOSM’s interim Associate Dean of Postgraduate Education.

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The Northern Ontario School of Medicine is committed to the education of high-quality physicians and health professionals, and to international recognition as a leader in distributed, learning-centred, community-engaged education and research.
For media inquiries, please contact:
news@nosm.ca

NOSM Board of Directors Celebrates Successful Year

Rooted in the North

Using a combination of web- and teleconference connectivity across Northern Ontario, the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) held its Annual Members and Board of Directors meetings on Wednesday, September 19, 2018.In accordance with Board policy, Dr. Alexandre Anawati, Danielle Bélanger-Corbin, Mark Hurst, and Bruce Sutton were reappointed as Directors. George Payne, NOSM medical student, was appointed as a Director for a one-year term. The audited financial statements for the year ending April 30, 2018 were approved as presented, and the Board approved the auditors for the fiscal year ending April 30, 2019.

Board members received updates on the many successes celebrated at NOSM over the past year, including Gididaa bimaadiziwemin wenji-maamoobiiding—NOSM’s Indigenous Community  Partnership Gathering—taking place in Wauzhushk Onigum Nation and the 13th annual Northern Health Research Conference happening this week in Kenora.

Board members and invited guests received copies of three new NOSM publications: Northern PassagesThe Scopeand NOSM’s annual Report to Northern Ontario. The theme of this year’s annual report is Rooted in the North. This unifying theme captures the progress that NOSM has made in establishing its roots in Northern Ontario, and reinforces the idea that the School is anchored in its mandate to be socially accountable to the needs and the diversity of the peoples and communities of Northern Ontario.

At the meeting, Dr. Moira McPherson, Board Vice Chair, congratulated Dr. Roger Strasser, Dean, on behalf of the Board, on achieving his performance goals of 2017/2018. “The annual review committee reviewed the documentation provided and the committee was very impressed with the quality of work that took place over the past year,” says McPherson. “Dean Strasser made important steps forward with a focus on Francophone and Indigenous relationships at the School. The work done around the strategic focus of NOSM as well as funding initiatives, has also been valuable. The annual review committee provided a strong and unanimous recommendation of support to the Board executive.”

The next Board of Directors meeting will be a two-day session held in Sudbury on November 22-23, 2018, when some sessions will be held jointly with NOSM’s Academic Council.

For more information about NOSM’s Board of Directors, please visit our website at nosm.ca/board.

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The Northern Ontario School of Medicine is committed to the education of high-quality physicians and health professionals, and to international recognition as a leader in distributed, learning-centred, community-engaged education and research.For further information, please contact:

news@nosm.ca