Skip to main content

Guidelines

  • Five lessons I learned from the Federation of Medical Women of Canada

    I can remember back in 1986, as a first-year medical student, walking down the hallway of Memorial University of Newfoundland and stopping to look at the announcement board.There it was – a paper flyer asking “Are you a female medical student?” Yes, I was! “Are you in financial need?” Yes, I was! “Sign up for FMWC and apply for a $1,000 scholarship.” So I did. And I got the scholarship.
  • Ontario doctor says appointment-based COVID-19 testing leaves vulnerable people behind

    Ontario's Health Minister, Christine Elliot told reporters on Wednesday that she recognizes the potential difficulties for vulnerable communities that come with the switch.
  • Hospitals look for ways to increase capacity, ask Ontario government for help

    Early last week, the OHA asked the government to move COVID-19 hot spots back to Stage Two of the province's pandemic response, which saw restrictions on non-essential businesses like restaurants, gyms, and movie theatres.
  • Take Black excellence all the way to the top

    The goal here is not to admonish Canada’s most revered medical organizations, but rather to illustrate the historic and longstanding dearth of Black representation in Canadian medical leadership. Over the past few years, calls to address barriers to achieving diversity in the Canadian health workforce have been gaining momentum. Diversity exists along a broad spectrum that includes gender, socioeconomic, linguistic, and racial subsets, to mention a few. Acknowledging that there exist many populations that are also underrepresented in the highest echelons of Canadian medical leadership, this article speaks specifically to the paucity of Black Canadians in formal physician leadership roles while proposing four key recommendations for addressing this diversity gap.
  • Quebec doctor calls on peers to confront systemic racism

    Last week, Quebec's government ordered an inquiry into the death of Joyce Echaquan, an Indigenous woman from Manawan who recorded workers at the Centre hospitalier de Lanaudière in Joliette mocking her with sexist and racist abuse soon before she died.
  • New study on vaccine hesitancy in community pharmacists

    CPhA survey finds pharmacists are good candidates for addressing hesitancy, however barriers to effective communication exist.
  • Health Canada examines safety of inflammatory bowel disease drug mesalazine in pregnancy

    Safety review could not confirm a link between the use of mesalazine (5-ASA) during pregnancy and birth defects in babies.
  • FPs as frazzled as their patients during pandemic

    Family medicine is in a state of crisis, exacerbated by the pandemic which, eight months in, has totally disrupted primary care physicians’ ability to provide face-to-face, quality care. Things are so bad that while governments are urging everyone to get a flu shot to avoid a “twindemic” many have expressed their confusion about finding out where to get that shot, just days away from the time when people typically start getting them.
X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds