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NOSM Board Holds Face-to-Face Meeting in Sudbury

Exemplary Staff, Faculty, Preceptors and Learners Recognized at Board Dinner

The Board of Directors of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) held a face-to-face meeting in Sudbury on December 4 and 5, 2008.

On the first day of the two-day meeting, Board members participated in sessions which provided a review of NOSM’s organizational structure, administration, and governance.  Following these sessions, the Board received a presentation by Ian M. Fraser of The Fundraising Network, and participated in discussions regarding Advancement at NOSM.

Later that evening at the Board dinner, Awards of Excellence were presented to learners (Tyler Verdun, Safiya Adam, Paul Miron, and Alex Anawati) and accepted on behalf of faculty and preceptor recipients (Dr. John Kargbo, Dr. Christine Kupsh, Dr. Jacques Abourbih, and Dr. Pierre Mikhail) by Dr. Gerry Cooper, Associate Dean, Learner Affairs.  Awards of Excellence were presented to staff members (Kimberley Larkin, Tina Vrbanac, Patty Fink, and Mathieu Seguin) by Ken Adams, Associate Dean, Administration.

At the formal Board meeting on the second day of the meeting, the Directors received reports from Board Committees, including the Finance and Audit, Board Executive, Quality Monitoring, Governance, Nominating, and Advancement Committees.

At the recommendation of the Nominating Committee, the Board of Directors approved the appointment of David Harris and Dr. Tyler Christie as members.

At the recommendation of the Advancement Committee, the Board of Directors approved a motion to continue preparations to modify NOSM’s Advancement model.

The Board of Directors approved a Financial Report from the Finance and Audit Committee for the six month period ending October 31, 2008.

Dr. Frederick Gilbert, President of Lakehead University and Chair of the School’s Board of Directors, noted that the two-day meeting accomplished several important objectives.  “Group cohesion and opportunities for interactive sessions and discussions are enhanced when Board members are able to meet in person.  This two-day meeting, which focused on issues of governance and Advancement, and celebrated the outstanding contribution of learners, faculty, preceptors, and staff, was a great success,” he said.

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine’s next Board of Directors meeting is scheduled for March 18, 2009.

For a complete list of Board members, please visit our website at www.nosm.ca.

NOSM Faculty Member Awarded by College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario

At a recent College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario Council meeting, Dr. William McCready, Associate Dean of Faculty Affairs at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM), was presented with a Council Award recognizing the compassionate and individual care that he delivers to each of his patients.
Described by his colleagues as an “outstanding physician,” Dr. McCready has led the establishment of a renal unit that is second to none and has been a driving force in the development and growth of medical training in Northern Ontario.

The Council Award distinguishes physicians who have demonstrated excellence in the eight roles identified by Educating Future Physicians of Ontario.  In 1993 the public was surveyed to help determine which qualities reflect the many needs of the community and expectations of their health-care practitioners.  The roles identified were:

•    the physician as an outstanding person and professional
•    the physician as scientist and scholar
•    the physician as learner
•    the physician as health advocate
•    the physician as resource manager
•    the physician as collaborator
•    the physician as communicator
•    the physician as clinical decision-maker

The Council Award recognizes those who fit the vision of an ideal physician.

Dr. McCready graduated in Medicine from Queen’s University in Belfast, Northern Ireland in 1975.  After completing postgraduate training in Belfast, he became a Member of the Royal College of Physicians in the United Kingdom in 1978.  In 1979, Dr. McCready became a research fellow at Toronto Western Hospital, and soon thereafter entered residency training in nephrology, completing his training in Toronto and Saskatoon, in time becoming a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.  In 1982, he relocated to Thunder Bay, in the intervening years he led the way in the creation of an outstanding renal dialysis care team for the community.

Dr. McCready has been teaching medical learners in the former Northwestern Ontario Medical Program (NOMP) since 1982.  This interest led to his roles as specialty coordinator in Family Medicine North, elective coordinator for NOMP and, finally, as Chair of NOMP.  During his tenure as Chair, postgraduate programs in the Royal College specialties were started in partnership with McMaster University.  He also participated in the efforts to ensure the Northern Ontario School of Medicine became a true pan-Northern partnership and in the recruitment and hiring of the Founding Dean.

NOSM’s eLearning Initiatives Awarded 2008 ORION Learning Honour

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) has been selected the ORION Learning Award recipient of 2008. In responding to the unique challenges of Northern Ontario, NOSM has created an innovative distributed model of education that integrates the latest in broadband technologies and eLearning initiatives to assist in the delivery of its distinctive curriculum.

The ORION Learning Award recognizes the achievements of faculty, students and/or staff in organizations in the implementation of initiatives that make use of ORION and advanced networks to promote and facilitate successful examples of innovations in teaching, learning and training. NOSM received this award at a ceremony held at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre on November 4.

Dr. David Topps, NOSM’s Director of eLearning, was on hand to accept the award on behalf of NOSM. “Wherever they are in Northern Ontario, NOSM learners and instructors can avail themselves to a wide range of eLearning technologies that are designed to advance both the learning process and educational content,” he said. “The Northern Ontario School of Medicine is extremely honoured to be recognized for its eLearning achievements.”

NOSM’s innovative eLearning initiatives include:

Virtual Patients: Game-based patient simulations that allow multiple cases to be rapidly developed and shared between multiple organizations.

Health Services Virtual Organisation (HSVO): A project to create a sustainable research platform for experimental development of shared ICT-based medical services across health services organizations across Canada.

The Northern Ontario Health Information Network (NOHIN) library: A distributed resource with access to over 2,500 full-text medical journals, multimedia resources and learning objects, provides additional online resources such as Online House Calls to support learners and a new open source Web 2.0 library information system.

Virtual Educational Research Services Environment (VERSE): A project that uses virtual reality, 3D visualization and hapto-visual (“virtual touch”) interfaces to clinical simulations.

Northern Ontario Simulators in Health Education Network (NOSHN): Provides distributed access and use of tools such as virtual patients and simulators to education institutions across 1 million square km of Northern Ontario.

Pan-Northern Database (PaNDA): A custom-designed, network-enabled database for coordination of educational opportunities and resources across the health-care education community that was designed through collaboration with partner institutions.

iAnatomy: High-resolution 3D anatomy images based on a large library of real anatomical dissections. Developed collaboratively with Stanford University Medical Media & Information Technologies.

PocketSnips: Brings high-quality educational materials by text and video to learner’s Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs), including information on specific procedures.

Praxis & Red Panda: Studies on the use of PDAs as communication, data capture and reference devices in a distributed educational environment, focused on the clinical learning of NOSM’s residency programs but drawing information from across the School.

NOSM Team Sites: A set of online collaborative tools that support NOSM’s research teams, enabling central sharing of large documents, files and multimedia.

About ORION

The Ontario Research and Innovation Optical Network (ORION) is Ontario’s ultra high-speed research and education network which connects all of Ontario’s universities, most colleges, several medical and other public research facilities and a growing number of school boards to one another and to the global grid of research and education networks.

NOSM University