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NOSM garden provides harvest for its Culinary Medicine Labs

When the call went out for volunteers for a Green Thumbs Committee at NOSM, Natalie Lefort was quick to answer. She is the School’s Research Laboratory Coordinator and has a flair for gardening. The group started out maintaining flower beds at NOSM at Laurentian University and shortly thereafter built a full-scale vegetable garden behind the medical school building.

“I signed up to take care of landscaping and later on Kate Beatty asked if anyone wanted to build a garden in the back. Of course, I said ‘Yes!’ I took the lead on that, along with anyone who wanted to help,” says Lefort.

The NOSM Healthy Workplace Group (HWG) spearheaded the initiative when they put out the initial call out for the Green Thumbs Committee.

“I was surprised, having never been involved in the Healthy Workplace Group, as I didn’t know that these opportunities existed,” said Lefort. “I was excited to do something for my colleagues and the learners, and to be part of all of the great advantages of gardening.”

The Green Thumbs Committee members who worked on the garden included volunteers Kate Beatty, Tammy Blouin, Judy Depatie, Amanda Fluke, Chantal MacDonald, Michael Martyn, Neli Nenkova, Lee Rysdale, and Lefort. Together, they built a 50-square foot garden with raised beds that students, faculty and staff can see from the lobby.

It was mid-summer by the time the garden was fully constructed and ready for planting. In order to get a jump on the growing season, they purchased young plants from a greenhouse.

“We planted tomatoes, zucchini, herbs, Swiss chard, green onions, cucumbers, and green peppers,” says Lefort. “Once we had some mature veggies, we harvested them and placed bowls of them in the various NOSM lunch rooms for people to take to savor right away or bring home.”

Lee Rysdale is a Registered Dietitian (RD), Associate Professor and NOSM’s Practice Education Research and Evaluation Lead in the Health Sciences and Interprofessional Education Unit.

Rysdale had the idea to incorporate the harvest into NOSM’s Culinary Medicine Labs scheduled for September 2019 – when the medical students and dietetic learners come together to explore recipes and prepare meals.

“We received cherry tomatoes and regular-sized tomatoes from the garden harvest and included them into two recipes,” says Rysdale. “We were feeding almost 30 people that day, so we used a small portion of the ingredients from the garden, and I let the students know where they came from.”

The medical students and learners in the group commented about how impressed they were to have “the opportunity to work with real food.”

Now the Green Thumbs Committee is considering the next phase of plans for the NOSM garden. “It would be interesting if the students were involved in growing the food but maybe that’s a future initiative,” says Lefort. “Our goal was just to get the first garden up and running. This coming spring we’ll definitely plan for new initiatives and for the September harvest.”

Other volunteers also joined in to contribute to the NOSM garden in Sudbury, including Pam Tallon, Research Lab Coordinator in Thunder Bay, and Field Good Farms in Cache Bay, Ontario, who shared their knowledge of building, maintaining and harvesting a garden.

In 2020, the Green Thumbs Committee is planning to focus on general gardening skills: “There is talk about having a ‘How-to’ gardening series on topics including planting seeds,  transplanting little plants, maintaining a garden, and harvesting,” says Lefort.

She says this spring they plan to plant more of the popular foods including cucumber, green peppers and tomatoes. They also want to try a few new vegetables like multi-coloured carrots, and new techniques including building covers to extend the growing season.

Perhaps the biggest health benefit to the School was that the garden mobilized people.

“Working on a garden meant a lot of things. At a personal level it brings you together outside and it feels like a community contribution. Growing your own food is delicious and healthy, it lessens the environmental impact, and is something people can do at home and anywhere,” says Lefort.

“It shows the possibilities of what we can do in the North.”

 

Recipes from the NOSM Culinary Labs using NOSM Garden Harvest Tomatoes:

 

Terrific Salmon and Tomato Salad

Makes 6 servings, Preparation Time: 5 min

Ingredients

2 pints (1L) grape tomatoes, halved lengthwise

2 stalks celery, thinly sliced

2 cans of 120 g salmon in water, drained

1 cup chopped cucumber

3 tbsp red wine vinegar

2 tsp extra virgin olive oil

1 clove garlic, minced

Pinch hot pepper flakes

1/3 cup chopped fresh basil

2 tbsp chopped fresh oregano

Serve it over lettuce leaves for added colour and crunch

Instructions

  1. In a large bowl, combine tomatoes, celery, salmon and cucumber.
  2. In a small bowl, whisk together vinegar, oil, garlic and hot pepper flakes.
  3. Pour over tomato mixture along with basil and oregano and toss to coat well.

Adapted from: http://www.cookspiration.com/recipe.aspx?perma=2UvKsf61q4g&g=7

 


Tabbouleh

Makes 6 servings

Ingredients

½ cup (125 mL) fine bulgur wheat

1 tbsp (15 mL) lemon juice

1 cup (250 mL) diced tomatoes

Salt and freshly ground pepper

2 cups (500 mL) finely diced celery

2 cups (500 mL) diced English cucumber

1 cup (250 mL) chopped green onion

2 cups (500 mL) roughly chopped Italian parsley

1 cup (125 mL) roughly chopped celery leaves

3 tbsp (45 mL) olive oil

1 tsp (5 mL) grated lemon rind

¼ tsp (1 mL) allspice

¼ tsp (1 mL) cinnamon

Instructions

  1. Cover bulgur with boiling water and lemon juice. Let sit for 5 to 7 minutes. Drain any excess water.
  2. In a large mixing bowl, stir hot bulgur with diced tomatoes. Season with salt and pepper. Cool.
  3. Add celery, cucumber and green onion to bulgur mixture. Sprinkle over parsley and celery leaves. Toss with oil, lemon rind, allspice and cinnamon. Season with salt and pepper. Taste, adding more lemon juice if needed.

Adapted from: http://foodanddrink.ca/lcbo-ear/RecipeController?language=EN&recipeType=1&action=recipe&recipeID=7371

Food, glorious food! In all its forms of consumerism, is food insecurity real?

Food insecurity in the North is a multifaceted problem. Northerners rely on a mix of traditional or wild food and market food, and both harvesting and food shipping costs are extremely high. Canada’s efforts to provide Northerners in isolated communities with improved access is failing to lower the cost of perishable and nutritious food in northern communities by providing northern retailers with a subsidy on a select list of foods.

 

Read more in the latest edition of Northern Routes.

Sault Ste. Marie continues to bring doctors home

Dr. Megan Culina was in her fourth year of her Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) residency in Sault Ste. Marie when she became the recipient of the Bring a Doctor Home bursary in 2013. The funds went a long way and today Dr. Culina has a full practice in Sault Ste. Marie with a 1,300 patient roster. She says returning to her home community where she had support was extremely helpful.

“The bursary was a huge help,” Dr. Culina explains. “Medical school is very expensive. People don’t realize the financial implications of taking on a career like medicine. In fact, I’m still paying off my student loan. These sorts of contributions really help.”

“Becoming a doctor has a significant impact on your entire family,” she explains. “I had my first child during my second year of medical school, and my second when I was a resident. My third child was born after I started practice which was much more manageable because I was settled back in Sault Ste. Marie.”

Frank DeMarco is a senior planner at Algoma Steel Inc. His company sponsors the Bring A Doctor Home hockey tournament which is in its 15th year.

All proceeds raised from the Bring A Doctor Home tournament fund the bursary which goes to NOSM students or residents each year. DeMarco says helping recruit and retain doctors in the Soo is of such high importance that it isn’t difficult to convince people to sign up, participate and support the tournament year after year.

“People come out in droves to support the Bring a Doctor Home tournament because they realize how great the need is,” says DeMarco. “We need more physicians here and the success of this tournament has a direct impact. The community is willing to do what it takes to bring doctors here.”

“It is impressive how everyone rallies together to support the bursary,” DeMarco adds.

Dr. Sarita Verma, NOSM Dean, President and CEO, says Sault Ste. Marie is a prime example of how communities can advocate for, attract and support the recruitment and retention of doctors.

“The Soo is a shining example of recruitment for other communities in the North. Sometimes, it takes an entire town working together to build a sustainable community of practice. We know that family physicians are more likely to stay in places where they genuinely feel supported, and where they have access to colleagues and allied health professionals,” says Dr. Verma. “I was impressed to learn that this local initiative has raised more than $407,000 through the Bring a Doctor Home hockey tournament.”

Dr. Culina agrees. She says the community support for new physicians in Sault Ste. Marie could be a model for other communities. She says she gets calls from unattached patients regularly who are seeking a family physician in the community. She also says that since she began her practice, some of her colleagues and friends have also opted to stay in the Soo.

“I think a lot of it has to do with how well everyone works together. That is a huge draw for the Soo,” she explains. “People tend to really support one another in the community and it is a very collegial place to work and live.”

She credits the community for the ongoing success of the Bring a Doctor Home hockey tournament. “Knowing that the community is supporting you and wants you to practice here makes all the difference,” says Culina. “So much time and energy goes into the tournament and it makes a difference knowing that an entire community is rooting for you.”

Background

Bring a Doctor Home hockey tournament is held January 13-18, 2020. For more information, to participate, or to learn more about the fundraiser, visit: bringadoctorhome.com

The Bring a Doctor Home hockey tournament is a community effort to support, recruit and retain local medical students from the Northern Ontario School of Medicine. Each year, a bursary is awarded to a medical student as an incentive to bring them back to practice in Sault Ste. Marie.Training doctors for the North has always been NOSMs primary focus. Since 2011, 214 NOSM-educated family physicians and 31 NOSM-educated specialists now practice in Northern Ontario.

NOSM University