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Dr. Walid Shahrour named NOSM University’s new Program Director, Urology

NOSM University is pleased to announce Dr. Walid Shahrour as the incoming Program Director of the new Urology Residency Program, effective October 1, 2023.  

Dr. Shahrour completed a clinical fellowship in reconstructive urology and trauma at Kulkarni Hospital in Pune, India, following medical school and residency at McGill University. He joined the faculty at NOSM University in 2016.  

Dr. Shahrour’s clinical practice focuses on minimally invasive surgeries and on all aspects of reconstructive urology, including cancer survivorship, urethral reconstruction, men’s health, upper tract, and pediatric reconstruction.  

His research interests include reconstructive urology and health equity. Dr. Shahrour has led international workshops in reconstructive urology and has published more than 40 peer-reviewed manuscripts. 

He currently serves as the surgical oncology lead for Northwestern Ontario and the lead of urology at Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre. He is the vice chair of the Canadian Undergraduate Urology Committee at the Canadian Urology Association. 

NOSM University seeks agency applications for Summer Studentship Program

NOSM University invites Northern Ontario-based agencies to apply for funding through its Summer Studentship Program. Established by the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, the program provides funding to approved agencies to employ health-care students looking to gain relevant work experience in their field of study.

The program is open to a wide variety of medical professionals such as nurses, medical radiation and lab technicians, dieticians, midwives, respiratory therapists, first- and second-year MD students, and rehabilitation learners such as physiotherapists, audiologists, speech language pathologists, and occupational therapists.

Northern Ontario-based agencies looking to hire health-care learners for the summer of 2024 may seek approval by completing the online Summer Studentship Program Agency Application Form from November 1, 2023 to January 1, 2024. If required, additional information about organizational and recruitment goals will be requested for submission by January 15, 2024.

Learners will be invited to apply for summer placements with approved agencies in winter 2024 through the NOSM University application process. To be eligible for the program, learners must be born and/or raised in Northern Ontario and studying in a health discipline approved by the program. All employment-related matters, such as the selection of candidates, job duties, rate of pay, and duration of the employment contract are determined by the employing agency.

Agencies interested in participating in the Summer Studentship Program are encouraged to visit nosm.ca/summerstudentship for more information or contact Nova Mason, Community Relations Coordinator, at summerstudentship@nosm.ca or 1-800-461-8777 ext. 7520.

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NOSM University is Canada’s first independent medical university and one of the greatest education and physician workforce strategy success stories of Northern Ontario. More than just a medical university, it was purpose-built to address the health needs of the region. While advocating for equitable access to care, the university contributes to the economic development of Northern Ontario. NOSM University relies on the commitment and expertise of the peoples of Northern Ontario to educate health-care professionals to practise in Indigenous, Francophone, rural, remote, and underserved communities. With a focus on diversity, inclusion and advocacy, NOSM University is an award-winning, socially accountable organization renowned for its innovative model of distributed, community-engaged education and research.

For information regarding NOSM University’s Summer Studentship Program, please contact:

Nova Mason
Community Relations Coordinator
NOSM University
Phone: 1-800-461-8777 ext. 7520 or 807-766-7520
Email: summerstudentship@nosm.ca

For further information regarding NOSM University, please contact: news@nosm.ca.

Intentionally addressing equity, diversity and inclusion

The appointment of Dr. Joseph LeBlanc, Associate Dean of Equity and Inclusion is a turning point for NOSM University.

Dr. LeBlanc is leading the Office of Equity and Inclusion where it is an accountable, actionable repository for both regional and national calls to action against racism and for leading in the space for and advocacy in diversity and inclusion. A space where key recommendations are honoured, respected and actioned, including NOSM University’s anti-racism strategy. 

“We need an equity and inclusion strategy that is unique to the North, but we must also be accountable and champion the greater national recommendations,” says Dr. LeBlanc. “We must honour recommendations resulting from experiences of racism in health care: the Truth and Reconciliation Commission recommendations; the recommendations and calls for justice of the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls Inquiry; the Black Medical Students Association of Canada recommendations (BMSAC); Canadian Francophone health recommendations; national LGBTQ2S+ recommendations; Ontario’s accessibility requirements; the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP)Joyce’s PrincipleJordan’s Principle; and more.” 

Equity and inclusion is directly linked to NOSM University’s strategic priority to advance social accountability. Dr. LeBlanc says the real challenge lies in having ourselves make a difference. We are a leading medical school in Canada and we graduate the highest number of Indigenous MDs. We can still do so much more, though. NOSM University is specifically funded to train doctors. If we collaborate with community partners in this spirit, with health issues and health equity top of mind, we will naturally advocate collaboratively for all of us. Our recently signed relationship accord with the Nishnawbe Aski Nation is one example of this. NOSM University will build a culture of advocacy, grounded in academic information and data. “To step up into an advocacy role and we need information,” says Dr. LeBlanc. “We need the research capacity and human resources to be able to assert ourselves as health advocates and leaders in the North.”

A concerted whole-school effort will make a lasting impact. “Everybody should be thinking about equity and inclusion in their individual work, however there’s still some hesitancy about what it means. The best-evidence approach is a culture shift combined with a holistic approach including research, policy, people, faculty, staff and learners who are willing to participate and contribute to a better way forward,” says Dr. LeBlanc. 

NOSM University and Associated Medical Services (AMS) announced the historic appointment of Dr. Darrel Manitowabi as the NOSM U-AMS Hannah Chair in the History of Indigenous Health and Indigenous Traditional Medicine. Dr. Manitowabi is working 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.

Reducing language barriers and improving access to French-language health services in the North are key priorities that advance NOSM University’s social accountability mandate. Opportunities to learn in French are being built into the curriculum, including clinical skills, medical terminology, enhanced language classes, and including l’offre active (Active Offer) programming. Active Offer planning tools and resources encourage NOSM staff, faculty and learners to make Active Offer second nature.

NOSM University’s newly named Dr. Gilles Arcand Centre for Health Equity is a one of a kind centre and the only one in Canada and possibly in the world. The establishment of the Centre will result in improved health of Northern Ontarians while extending beyond NOSM’s commitment to being socially accountable in our education and research programs and advocating for health equity. The Dr. Gilles Arcand Centre for Health Equity’s integrated approach in the areas of policy leadership and advocacy; research and innovation; education; and community impact will produce a deeper and broader understanding on a range of issues affecting population health outcomes inside and outside the medical system. In this way the Centre’s social accountability research defines and strengthens the School, making NOSM and its partners more effective in the achievement of this critical mission. 

NOSM University