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PHOTO GALLERY: Travelling health care roadshow visits Lake City Secondary School

Post secondary students share knowledge with students in Cariboo, Bella Coola

A roadshow showcasing health care careers visited Lake City Secondary Williams Lake Campus on Thursday, May 18.

With a mission to educate local students about the wide range of health career opportunities, 11 health care students and three staff members interacted with students from both the Columneetza and Williams Lake campuses, sharing information about dental hygiene, medical laboratory science, medicine, nursing, occupational therapy and pharmacy.

The travelling students were also invited to an event at the Williams Lake Visitors Centre on Wednesday, May 17, hosted by the Healthcare Landing Program where they got to meet people from Williams Lake who are working in various medical professions.

Part of the fun included a trivia quiz about Williams Lake.

Dr. Sean Maurice with the UBC Northern Medical Program at UNBC, initiated the roadshow in 2010.

“We try to go every year, doing two in May, and going to three to five different communities. We usually take about five years to get back to a certain community, but we had a two-year pandemic that threw us off,” he said.

The roadshow is delivered in partnership with the Northern Medical Program Trust, Rural Education Action Plan, Interior Health, UNBC, and UBC Faculty of Medicine.

First the roadshow went to Bella Coola, followed by 100 Mile House, Williams Lake and Quesnel.

Maurice said the university knows it is important to get out into the communities to promote healthcare professions with rural youth.

“If students from rural areas go to university or college and train for health care they are more likely to return to their communities to work or another smaller community which is so important for rural health,” he said.

Following its visit at a community, the roadshow’s organizers receive feedback, specifically that high school students are talking about health careers six months or a year later.

Many northern communities contribute to the Northern Medical Program Trust and at the annual meeting mayors, councillors and other local leaders come together to chat with the dean of the medical school.

“They will talk about what is working, what isn’t working, what they like and every year they say they want more of the roadshow. My dean tells me that we should keep doing it as there is an indication that people like it,” Maurice said.

Being part of the roadshow is helpful for the students involved as well because they get to learn from each other and be exposed to different disciplines. It is important for rural health for students to train together and build relationships so they know something about the other careers, Maurice said.

Students apply and all expenses are paid for them during the roadshows.

“In addition to the time they spend in the schools we also do tours of health centres and we do something fun in communities because we want them to be able to imagine what life would be like living in a community like that,” Maurice said.

Having students in the medical program from a variety of communities and backgrounds also adds to the diversity of each cohort, Maurice said.

Originally from Vancouver, he moved to Prince George with his family and has been on the faculty for 16 years. He studied in Calgary and Vancouver. He teaches histopathology, which refers to the microscopic examination of tissue in order to study the manifestation of disease.

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monica.lamb-yorski@wltribune.com

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Monica Lamb-Yorski

About the Author: Monica Lamb-Yorski

A B.C. gal, I was born in Alert Bay, raised in Nelson, graduated from the University of Winnipeg, and wrote my first-ever article for the Prince Rupert Daily News.
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