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Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario and Northern Ontario School of Medicine Present Total of $90,000 in Medical Student Research Awards

Earlier today, seven Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) medical students received research awards valued at $6,000 each from the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario (HSFO). An additional eight NOSM medical students received NOSM Founding Dean’s Summer Medical Student Research Awards also valued at $6,000 each.

This is the third year for the HSFO Summer Medical Student Awards for NOSM. The program is a five-year commitment valued at nearly a quarter of a million dollars. Student research projects supported by the HSFO provide Northern medical students with the opportunity to gain cardiovascular research training while working with an established researcher at NOSM. The projects are carried out all across Northern Ontario. Similarly, the Founding Dean’s awards provide NOSM medical students with an opportunity to conduct hands-on research in a variety of disciplines.

“The Heart and Stroke Foundation, in partnership with the Northern Ontario School of Medicine, is beginning to make significant inroads in life-saving heart disease and stroke research for the people of Northern Ontario,” says Dr. Marco Di Buono, Director, Research, Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario. “We are building research capacity in the North by keeping bright, young minds in the region. This will help us to meet our Mission of eliminating heart disease and stroke and reducing their impact for future generations of Northern Ontarians. It is only through effective partnerships like this, made possible in part through the support of TD Bank Financial Group, that we will meet the needs of the entire population of Ontario.”

This year’s student projects, supported by the HSFO, cover a full range of research studies including:

  • Diabetic care and prevention in Aboriginal communities
  • Atherosclerosis and hypertension
  • Risk factors of pre-stroke and the disability of patients after stroke in Northern Ontario
  • Prevention and awareness of childhood obesity in North Bay
  • Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario Aboriginal Hypertension Management Program
  • Inter-professional collaboration between different professional bodies as it relates to CVD treatment
  • Role of specific proteins involved in the regulation of vital cardiac functions

The 2008 recipients of the HSFO Summer Medical Student Awards for NOSM are:

  • Kashif Ahmed
  • Olubukunola Ayeni
  • Elizabeth Cooper
  • Meghan Garnett
  • Penny Forth
  • Marlon Hagerty
  • David Harris

The Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario gratefully acknowledges the generous support of TD Bank Financial Group as a supporter of the HSFO Summer Medical Student Awards for the Northern Ontario School of Medicine.

Immediately following the HSFO presentation, eight NOSM medical students were awarded NOSM Founding Dean Summer Medical Student Research Awards valued at $6,000 each.

Dr. Greg Ross, NOSM’s Associate Dean of Research, expressed enthusiasm regarding the value of the opportunities provided by the Founding Dean Summer Medical Student Research Award. “Our students are very excited to begin working on their projects this summer, and I look forward to working with a number of them,” said Dr. Greg Ross. “The Founding Dean Summer Medical Student Research Awards allow our students to remain in the North for the summer, and gain valuable research experience.”

This year’s student projects, supported by the Founding Dean Summer Medical Student Research Awards, include the following topics:

  • Functional analysis of externalized behaviour in children with fetal alcohol syndrome
  • History of disabled children’s health in Northern Ontario
  • History of medical ethics and military medicine
  • Aboriginal cancer research consultation
  • Patient satisfaction in clinics that employ a shared-care approach to mental health
  • Retrospective study of mentally ill persons in standoff with police
  • Accuracy of screening for developmental disabilities in primary care settings
  • Post-operative outcomes of hip fracture hemiarthroplasty in a community hospital versus a tertiary care institution

The 2008 recipients of the Founding Dean Summer Medical Student Research Awards are:

  • Safiya Adam
  • Bruce Cook
  • Kendra Cote
  • Brandon Entwistle
  • Stacey Erven
  • Jennifer McPhail
  • Carolyn Stark
  • Lynn Noel de Tilly

NOSM Founding Dean Dr. Roger Strasser noted that the School is fortunate to have the opportunity to partner with the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario. “Research Awards provide medical students, our future physicians, with valuable experience in the field of research. I am very excited that fifteen awards, totaling $90,000, have been presented to the School’s medical students today. I would like to congratulate the students on their awards, and wish them success with their research projects,” said Dr. Strasser.

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine is a pioneering faculty of medicine. The School is a joint initiative of Lakehead and Laurentian Universities, with main campuses in Thunder Bay and Sudbury, and multiple teaching and research sites across Northern Ontario. By educating skilled physicians and undertaking health research suited to community needs, the School will become a cornerstone of community health care in Northern Ontario.

The Heart and Stroke Foundation, a volunteer-based health charity, leads in eliminating heart disease and stroke and reducing their impact through the advancement of research and its application, the promotion of healthy living, and advocacy.

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine is a pioneering faculty of medicine. The School is a joint initiative of Lakehead and Laurentian Universities, with main campuses in Thunder Bay and Sudbury, and multiple teaching and research sites across Northern Ontario. By educating skilled physicians and undertaking health research suited to community needs, the School will become a cornerstone of community health care in Northern Ontario.

The Heart and Stroke Foundation, a volunteer-based health charity, leads in eliminating heart disease and stroke and reducing their impact through the advancement of research and its application, the promotion of healthy living, and advocacy.

 

$17,000 Donation to NOSM Bursary Fund establishes Bring a Doctor Home Bursary

This past weekend, Hal Mogg, Algoma Steel Hockey Tournament Director, presented a $17,000 cheque on behalf of participants in the Algoma Steel Hockey Tournament to the Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) Bursary Fund to establish a Bring a Doctor Home Bursary. The presentation took place following the conclusion of the tournament at the John Rhodes Community Centre with NOSM Founding Dean Dr. Roger Strasser and Manager of Development Gail Brescia in attendance to accept the financial contribution.

On behalf of NOSM and the School’s future students, Dr. Strasser expressed his gratitude for the generous donation. “Contributions to the Northern Ontario School of Medicine Bursary Fund are long-term investments in better health care for Northern Ontarians.” He continued, “We are very thankful to the participants of the Algoma Steel Hockey Tournament for this donation and their continued commitment to supporting students hailing from the North who wish to pursue their medical education in the North.”

The Bring a Doctor Home Bursary contribution will be matched, dollar for dollar, by the Ontario Government, and the bursary itself will continue to grow with each successive year that the tournament raises donations.

The Algoma Steel Hockey Tournament is open exclusively to employees and retirees of the company. Twenty-one teams from various departments, including three teams of retirees, participate in four divisions. In 2006, the tournament participants collected $10,500 in donations for students of the medical school, which, with a contribution from Algoma Steel and matching government funding, created the Algoma Steel Bursary in the amount of $100,000.

Participants in the Algoma Steel Hockey Tournament recognize the financial strain medical students can face. “The Bring a Doctor Home Bursary will help students reduce costs associated with earning a medical degree and, hopefully, encourage those hailing from Northern Ontario who are interested in a medical career to fulfil their dreams,” said Hal Mogg, Algoma Steel Hockey Tournament Director. “We believe this investment will strategically assist Sault Ste. Marie with long-term recruitment of family physicians to Northern Ontario,” he said.

A photo of Dr. Strasser accepting the donation from the Algoma Steel Hockey Tournament participants is available upon request.

Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) and Lakehead University

The Northern Ontario School of Medicine (NOSM) and Lakehead University are pleased to announce the receipt of two grants from HealthForceOntario (HFO) in excess of $650,000.

The grants were awarded through HFO’s Interprofessional Care/Education or health-care projects that foster and build interprofessional teams.

The first grant of $464,663 will be dedicated to the establishment of a Northern Interprofessional Centre for Health Education (NICHE). The goal of NICHE will be to support northern, rural, remote, and Aboriginal health needs. It will act as a unifying entity to build on the current Continuing Health Professional Education (CHPE) initiatives of NOSM and Interprofessional Education offerings of Lakehead University, as well as other partners such as Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre (TBRHSC), Laurentian University, Sudbury Regional Hospital, community colleges across the North, and both the North East and North West Local Health Integration Networks (LHINs).

Dr. Ian Newhouse, Dean of the Faculty of Professional Schools at Lakehead University, says “NICHE will offer health-care professionals in the North access to an outstanding educational experience which will fit their practice, lifestyle, and the needs of the community. The resources available through NICHE will better equip practitioners with the knowledge, understanding, and functions of team-based, collaborative, patient-centred care.” A cornerstone of NICHE will be the development of a Pan-Northern Advisory Committee, ensuring appropriate representation from all community partners and stakeholders.

The second grant, in the amount of $189,000 was awarded to NOSM’s Rehabilitation Studies Program for Facilitating Leadership in Interprofessional Care (FLIC). FLIC will enable NOSM to establish a process for providing mentorship and leadership to health-care teams wanting to advance the concept of Interprofessional Care (IPC) in their practice settings.

Dr. Wayne Bruce, Associate Dean, Continuing Health Professional Education, believes FLIC will provide a unique opportunity for health-care providers in Northern Ontario. “FLIC will allow health professionals to bring interprofessional education into the workplace, and will support the ongoing training and facilitation of health-care teams that are dedicated to developing their capacity to providing the best care possible to the people and communities of Northern Ontario.”

NOSM University