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Third Consecutive Year NOSM Receives Honour

On Friday evening, the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) was presented with its third Society of Rural Physicians of Canada (SRPC) Rural Medical Education award. This year’s award was given to the Canadian medical school program that has matched the most graduates to rural family medicine programs in the 2011 Canadian Resident Matching Service (CaRMS) process. NOSM Dean, Dr. Roger Strasser accepted the award on behalf of the School at a dinner held by the SRPC in Whistler, British Columbia.

In 2011, 44% of NOSM’s graduating MD class matched to a rural family medicine residency program. Many Northern-trained physicians who have completed medical school training are choosing to continue their residency training in rural family medicine programs, as opposed to urban settings.

“The Northern Ontario School of Medicine is truly honoured to receive the Rural Medical Education Award from the Society of Rural Physicians of Canada,” said NOSM Dean, Dr. Roger Strasser. “Having received this recognition for a third consecutive year is a sign that NOSM’s distinct model of distributed, community-engaged medical education is working to produce physicians with an affinity for rural medical education.”

NOSM is now preparing for the upcoming graduation of its fourth class of MD graduates, 50% of whom have chosen to complete residency training in rural family medicine.

For more signs of NOSM’s success, please visit: www.nosm.ca/signsofsuccess

NOSM Learners to Engage with Thunder Bay Secondary Schools to Promote Health Care Related Careers

This spring, medical students from the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) will begin an outreach program through the Ontario Medical Student Association (OMSA), the student section of the Ontario Medical Association (OMA). The program, called Altitude: Healthcare Mentoring, is aimed at encouraging students in their final year of secondary school to seriously consider a career in the field of health care.

“This program gives us the opportunity to showcase to youth in our community that we were once in their shoes, and that their dream to become medical professionals is obtainable,” explained Hilary Bohler, one member of the five-person Thunder Bay Altitude Team Outreach. “It is an amazing experience to go into a local secondary school and talk to young, passionate students about what it takes to have a career as a doctor, nurse, or physical therapist.” Other team members, all of whom attended secondary school in Thunder Bay, include Kayla Berst, Valerie Nicholls, Stacey Tokar, and Paul Benvenuto.

Secondary schools that will be visited this year include: Hammarskjold High School, Superior Collegiate & Vocational Institute, Westgate Collegiate & Vocational Institute, Sir Winston Churchill Collegiate & Vocational Institute, École secondaire catholique de La Vérendrye, St. Patrick High School, and, St. Ignatius High School.

NOSM Dean, Dr. Roger Strasser, applauded the efforts undertaken by NOSM’s medical students for embarking upon this important initiative. “By taking the time to speak to secondary students in the community of Thunder Bay, our learners highlight their incredible sense of commitment to improving the health of people in Northern Ontario. It speaks to their willingness to give back, and the kind of physicians they will be in the future.”

The Thunder Bay Altitude Team Outreach team is currently accepting applications for the 2012-2013 school year. Applications are due June 1, 2012, and students interested in a career in health care who wish to be considered are encouraged to apply by contacting the Thunder Bay Altitude Outreach Team by email atoutreach@thunderbay.altitudementoring.ca .

For further information, please contact:

Lisa Kokanie
Communications Officer
(807) 766-7314
lisa.kokanie@nosm.ca

NOSM Faculty Members Receive Cancer Quality Council of Ontario Innovation Award

A cancer prevention research project involving Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) faculty members in partnership with 10 First Nation communities in Northwestern Ontario has garnered attention from the Cancer Quality Council of Ontario. The team’s project, titled “Engaging First Nations Women in Cervical Cancer Screening: Assessing Factors Related to Screening and Uptake of Self-Sampling,” has resulted in the team being chosen as the 2011 recipient of the Cancer Quality Council of Ontario Innovation Award. “Our team has been able to develop a respectful cancer prevention research study with our collaborating First Nations partners. It is very exciting that this process is recognized along with the science in this project at a provincial level,” says NOSM faculty member Dr. Marion Maar, a Medical Anthropologist and co-Principal Investigator on the project.

Dr. Ingeborg Zehbe (Lead Investigator and Scientist at Thunder Bay Regional Research Institute) explains that cervical cancer is the third most common cancer in Canadian women between 20 and 49 years of age. It is always associated with human papillomavirus (HPV) and is preventable with regular screenings. Many First Nations women, however, are not regularly screened. This may contribute to this population having a significantly higher prevalence of cervical cancer compared to other Canadian women.

Specifically, the project aims to raise awareness of cervical cancer, its association with HPV, and its prevention through screening by developing culturally appropriate campaigns and educational resources. It will also introduce convenient self-sampling and sensitive HPV testing as alternative for (Pap) Papanicolaou screening.

Amy Nahwegahbow, the study’s coordinator and member of the Whitefish River First Nation, has a solid background in First Nations health issues. “One of the outcomes of the research will be the development of culturally safe methods and holistic approaches to screening, which translates into better screening uptake and better prognosis for First Nations women at risk of cervical cancer,” says Nahwegahbow.

Potential Outcomes for Aboriginal Populations:

The study is expected to last three years, and has received an operating grant worth $594,505 from the Canadian Institute of Health Research. Along with Drs. Zehbe and Maar, the investigators include Drs. Alberto Severini (University of Manitoba), Julian Little (University of Ottawa), Gina Ogilvie (British Columbia Centre for Disease Control), Ann Burchell (Ontario HIV Treatment Network), Nicholas Escott (Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre) and Helle Moeller (Lakehead University).

About 1000 First Nations women between 25 and 70 years of age from Northwest Ontario will be invited to participate. A key feature of this study has been an emphasis on developing trusting and genuine relationships with First Nations communities helping to reduce the burden of cervical cancer within these communities. First Nations community members, and in particular women, will be engaged in all decision making processes. This work will assist in the implementation of an organized cervical cancer-screening program that is culturally safe for the needs of First Nations women. It will further guide the design of prophylactic vaccines that are precisely adapted to the truly prevailing HPV types in First Nations women as suggested in other related studies.

“These researchers are advancing new and innovative programs aimed at reducing the risk of cancer as well as improving care for cancer patients,” says Dr. Roger Strasser, Dean of NOSM. “The award recognizes best practices for improving the quality and value of health-care programs across Ontario. We are happy that leaders in our region are being recognized for their valuable contributions to improving the health of the people and communities in Northern Ontario.”

NOSM University