Lethbridge Herald

MOU signed on new physician training centre

- Al Beeber abeeber@lethbridge­herald.com

Amemorandu­m of understand­ing was signed by the universiti­es of Lethbridge and Calgary Friday on the new rural medical education training centre here that will begin operating in the fall of 2025.

The U of L is partnering with the University of Calgary on the centre here while the University of Alberta will partner with Northweste­rn Polytechni­c to develop one in Grand Prairie.

Capital funding of $43.2 million is being invested in the Lethbridge centre while a total of $55.6 million will be used to support operating expenses for the centre here and in Grand Prairie.

An additional $126 million will support the overall physician training expansion in Alberta.

Two ministries - Health and Advanced Education - are jointly responsibl­e for the training of physicians in Alberta.

Through the partnershi­p of the two universiti­es, students will have the chance to complete their University of Calgary medical degree entirely at the U of L.

After a series of speeches by dignitarie­s including U of L president and vice-president Digvir Jayas who acted as emcee for the event on Level 8 in the Science Commons building, the MOU was signed in front of a large audience.

Signatorie­s were University of Lethbridge Provost and Vice-President (Academic) Michelle Helstein and University of Calgary interim Provost and VicePresid­ent (Academic) Penny Werthner.

Initially, beginning in the fall of 2025 there will be 10 seats per year at the U of L centre which will ramp up to 30, Advanced Education Minister Rajan Sawhney told The Herald last month in an interview before the announceme­nt of the training centre.

The centre will give an opportunit­y for students from here and the region to study close to home. The province has said the two centres are the first steps in solving the shortage of physicians in rural Alberta.

Both training centres will be delivering an entire under-graduate medical education program and will deliver hands-on learning experience­s in rural communitie­s surroundin­g them, says the province.

Speakers including the university’s professor emeritus Leroy Little Bear talked about the significan­ce of what was called several times a historic day in providing the chance for many southern Albertans without a doctor to get the healthcare they need.

Little Bear said in Alberta communitie­s “if one part of our population is not being well taken care of health-wise it affects all of us,” just a like a head cold affects a person’s entire system.

He added that general practition­ers are an important element of health care because they take a holistic approach to a person’s system.

He said in the past, medical practition­ers always usually flocked to bigger centres because of specializa­tion “but the southern Alberta medical program is talking more about general practition­ers and general practition­ers we would like to see out in our communitie­s.”

“We are excited to partner with the University of Calgary to develop a new rural medical education program training centre right here at the university campus,” said Jayas in his statement.

The program will help address the physician shortage in communitie­s outside the province’s urban centres, he added.

The MOU confirms the commitment and the formalizes a “unique medical education partnershi­p,” he added.

Werthner said after the ceremony that “this a unique partnershi­p.” She thanked the province for funding the program to ensure “that we can provide physicians both being trained and staying and living and working in the community which is what we so need in this province.

“And the partnershi­p between University of Calgary - where we have a medical school and great expertise - and then partnering with the University of Lethbridge to put that place in this location, is absolutely unique,” Werthner added.

“What I love about it is it shows that we can work very well together as educationa­l institutio­ns to do what the community really needs to have done with our expertise.”

The U of C has a well respected medical school and to bring its expertise to Lethbridge speeds up the process of training physicians here.

“That is such a critical piece again to train them here where they will continue to live and practice because we are very well aware we need many many more physicians and particular­ly family physicians.”

Helstein said “having the paperwork signed is really a culminatio­n of a whole set of work that has happened long in advance of getting to the point of MOU so it’s a really exciting day because what it does is formalize really hard work.”

Helstein added “it recognizes that we are indeed moving forward with this initiative thanks to funding from the government of Alberta.”

The program, Helstein said, will have a “huge impact on the availabili­ty of doctors not only in city of Lethbridge but across southern Alberta. What we know is that if we recruit students locally and we train them locally, they are just way more likely to stay” locally.

 ?? HERALD PHOTO BY AL BEEBER ?? Provost and Vice-President (Academic) Penny Werthner of the U of C and the U of L’s Provost and Vice-President (Academic) Michelle Helstein pose for photos as U of L president and vice-president Digvir Jayas looks on after the signing of a Memorandum of Understand­ing between the schools on a new medical education training centre here that will begin operating in the fall of 2025.
HERALD PHOTO BY AL BEEBER Provost and Vice-President (Academic) Penny Werthner of the U of C and the U of L’s Provost and Vice-President (Academic) Michelle Helstein pose for photos as U of L president and vice-president Digvir Jayas looks on after the signing of a Memorandum of Understand­ing between the schools on a new medical education training centre here that will begin operating in the fall of 2025.
 ?? HERALD PHOTO BY AL BEEBER ?? A crowd at the Science Commons building at the University of Lethbridge applauds during one of the speeches before a Memorandum of Understand­ing was signed.
HERALD PHOTO BY AL BEEBER A crowd at the Science Commons building at the University of Lethbridge applauds during one of the speeches before a Memorandum of Understand­ing was signed.

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