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Northern Ontario School of Medicine hosting a virtual information session on MD program admissions

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) will be hosting virtual information sessions for individuals interested in applying to the MD Program.

These sessions are held annually in conjunction with the opening of the new admission cycle. Learn about the admission requirements and application process at the following information sessions:

Date:            Thursday, June 25, 2020
Time:           6:30 p.m. EST

Date:            Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Time:           6:30 p.m. EST

Registration is required for these events.

2020 Admissions Information Session Registration

NOSM offers a WebEx enabled interactive videoconference that allows you to watch the live presentations on your phone or computer. You will be able to type questions that the moderator will ask on your behalf.

An archived video of the Admissions Information session will be available for viewing after July 5, 2020, at your convenience. Please visit nosm.ca and open the Live and Archived Webcasts button under Links.

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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-centered, community-engaged education and research.

For further information about the MD program, please contact:
Admissions and Learner Recruitment
admissions@nosm.ca
1-800-461-8777

For media inquiries, please contact:
news@nosm.ca

COVID-19 MENTAL HEALTH THREATS TO VULNERABLE POPULATIONS: CALL TO ACTION

Dr. Claudio Soares, on behalf of the ACPC (Association of Chairs of Psychiatry of Canada)

To date, COVID-19 pandemic responses have focused on reducing the risk of spread of infection, treating severely ill, and sustaining healthcare system capacity.

While concerns about the general population’s mental distress are being addressed through various online support strategies, these initiatives do not address COVID-19-related threats to mental health in people with serious mental illnesses or addictions, vulnerable populations in violent living situations, and frontline healthcare providers.

We call on government, business, and civil leaders to recognize the needs of these populations now and work with leaders in psychiatry and mental health to rapidly develop solutions as failure to act now could seriously undermine Canada’s efforts to control the disease and its negative impacts on post-pandemic recovery.           

Comprising three to five per cent of the Canadian population, people with serious mental illnesses are at risk of contracting COVID-19 because their mental illness may compromise their ability to stay safe. Homelessness or group living arrangements further increase risk of infection and spread.

Many have co-existing medical disorders that put them at risk for COVID-19 complications. And people with serious mental illnesses face a unique additional risk factor: psychiatric inpatient hospitalization. Rapid spread of infection on psychiatric units is possible due to communal bathrooms, avoidance of alcohol-based hand sanitizers, and difficulties in separating those who are infected from those who aren’t. Patients with serious mental issues are therefore potentially at high risk to become infected, transmit the infection to each other and staff, and return to the community as asymptomatic carriers.

People with addiction or substance use problems such as alcohol, drugs, or gambling, face multiple challenges during COVID-19 infection control. Support groups, a key part of recovery, have been shut down or now exist only virtually. Social distancing can lead to unstructured time and the loss of social supports, recreational activities, or jobs — all risk factors for addictions relapse. These problems can also escalate recreational behaviours to problem use. For those who are addicted, the closure of cannabis or alcohol stores can reduce access, leading to withdrawal. Virtual support and care are limited by lack of devices or access to the Internet.

Persons in violent living situations who are exposed to domestic violence, child abuse, or dependent adult abuse, will suffer during this pandemic. For children, living with violence is associated with abnormal brain and stress response system function, adult medical disorders, and mental health disorders across the lifespan. Social isolation increases the chance of victimization. Many programs exist to help families or victims, but operation during social distancing is difficult. Home-bound victims are less likely to be identified by neighbours, teachers, or co-workers, or to be able to escape to safe places. Services interruption for the developmentally or mentally disabled living with caregivers can increase stress, possibly resulting in new abuse. Without attention to this population’s needs, many children, youth, and adults may be victimized during COVID-19.

Frontline health care providers and first responders provide care in situations of personal danger and may need to make decisions violating their moral beliefs. They are vulnerable to disruption of their own mental health now and in the future. Trauma treatment works best when applied quickly, which may not be possible under our already strained system.

Acting now to address the mental health needs of these groups is critical.

Three over-arching innovations, rapidly developed and implemented, would dramatically affect the outcomes for all.

First, every Canadian should have access to affordable broadband, a device, and virtual mental healthcare, no matter where they live, their socioeconomic status, or the severity of their mental illness. Accomplishing this vision requires pioneering partnerships between business, government, academic centres, and communities, but it can be done.

Second, creative housing solutions must be found now for better infection control in persons with SMI, the homeless, and people with severe addictions. Hotels with ensuite rooms could be a solution.

Third, we need rapid innovation in trauma treatment for COVID-19 experiences. COVID-19 research for diagnostic testing, treatments, and a vaccine is moving at lightning speed and the same is needed for pioneering treatments for the trauma that will remain after the infection is gone.

Dr. Claudio Soares is the current president of the Association of Chairs of Psychiatry of Canada (ACPC).

The ACPC is a group of leaders from 17 psychiatry departments from medical schools across Canada. The group is responsible for the training of psychiatrists, the majority of psychiatric research taking place in Canada, and for supporting clinical service networks across the country.

NOSM and Associated Medical Services Announce Historic First: Research Chair in Indigenous Health and Traditional Medicine

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) and Associated Medical Services (AMS) are pleased to announce the historic appointment of Dr. Darrel Manitowabi as the NOSM-AMS Hannah Chair in the History of Indigenous Health and Indigenous Traditional Medicine for a five year renewable term effective July 1, 2020.

“The Northern Ontario School of Medicine is deeply honoured to have Dr. Darrel Manitowabi take on this valuable position,” says Dr. Sarita Verma, NOSM Dean, President and CEO. “We are taking another major step in addressing how colonialism has affected the health and wellbeing of First Nations communities by no longer avoiding the history of wondrous healing and medicines in our society. We have much to learn from that history and NOSM is committed to the Calls to Action made by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada.”

“AMS is incredibly pleased to announce the addition of the NOSM-AMS Hannah Chair in the History of Indigenous Health and Traditional Medicine,” states Gail Paech, CEO of AMS. “The Hannah Chairs were established to create enduring cultures of teaching and research in the history of medicine and health care and we believe Dr. Darrel Manitowabi will bring a wealth of essential knowledge to his institution and Canada at large.”

Dr. Manitowabi is Three Fires (Odawa, Ojibwa, Potawatomi) Anishinaabe from the Wiikwemkoong Unceded Territory and currently resides in the Whitefish River First Nation. He recently served as the Director of Northern and Community Studies at Laurentian University, and at NOSM was the Director of Indigenous Affairs in 2018 and the Assistant Dean of Graduate Studies in 2019.

An Indigenous anthropologist with research interests in Anishnaabe ethnohistory and oral history, Indigenous gambling, Indigenous social determinants of health, Indigenous healing, Indigenous-state relations and Indigenous self-determination, Dr. Manitowabi’s research and publications examine how the historical legacy of colonialism impacts the health and wellbeing of First Nations communities. His research in the history of Indigenous health situates the place of Anishinaabe language (Anishinaabemowin) and knowledge (kendaasawin) in conceptions of holistic wellbeing (mino-bimaadiziwin) and ill health (maanaaji-bimaadizwin).

As the NOSM-AMS Hannah Chair in the History of Indigenous Health and Traditional Medicine, Manitowabi will work to promote the discussion of the inherent, constitutional, Treaty and international rights of all Indigenous Peoples and communities and the protection of traditional knowledge and medicines from appropriation. Dr. Manitowabi’s research focus, as the Chair, will be in the history of Indigenous Health and he will contribute to NOSM’s role in leading scholarly activity in the history of Indigenous Health.

Endowed through the generosity of AMS, Dr. Manitowabi joins seven other AMS Hannah Chairs in medical schools across Canada, where they are integral members of undergraduate and graduate education in the health professions, especially medicine.

An Anishinaabemowin audio version of this media release is available here:

NOSM and AMS

NOSM University