麻豆传媒

 

"We have an opportunity here"

- July 16, 2009

Discussion of a three-point plan to deal with a looming accreditation issue at 麻豆传媒 Medical School ended in a round of applause at a surprisingly upbeat Faculty of Medicine town hall meeting, Wednesday, in Halifax.

The subject of the meeting was a notice of intent received by the school from its American-based accrediting body, the Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME). It calls for the school鈥檚 accreditation to be renewed on a 24-month probationary basis. The finding has no force or effect at this stage, pending the outcome of an appeal, which the school is launching. In the meantime the medical school鈥檚 undergraduate medical education program remains fully accredited.

"麻豆传媒鈥檚 2009 graduating class led the country in obtaining their first choice of residency placements in the national competition, organized by the Canadian Resident Matching Service. Our 麻豆传媒 medical graduates also consistently score in the top quartile of Canadian medical students in national licensure exams."

- Dr. Tom Marrie

The school鈥檚 incoming Dean Tom Marrie M.D. challenged faculty, residents, staff and students to use this setback as an opportunity to put the school at the forefront of medical education in Canada. 鈥淚 think we have an opportunity here to do something extraordinarily new and innovative.鈥

Many of those in attendance were energized by the idea and follow-up emails have started to pour into the Dean鈥檚 Office from individuals throughout the Faculty offering their expertise and help to implement the plan. Most of the attendees were in Halifax, but a number joined the meeting by video-conference from various sites in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

The aggressive three-point strategy calls for the school to appeal the LCME finding, continue its efforts鈥攐ngoing at the time of the accreditation review鈥攖o make needed improvements, and launch a major curriculum renewal.

Dr. Marrie says he envisions a renewal 鈥渢hat will exceed current LCME standards and put 麻豆传媒 on the leading edge of undergraduate medical education in Canada.鈥澨

He pointed out the LCME, even while raising concerns about our undergraduate program, acknowledges the excellent outcomes of 麻豆传媒鈥檚 medical graduates. 鈥淭his is the critical test of any medical education program, and we continue to pass it with flying colours each year. That鈥檚 why I鈥檓 so confident we will be able to deal in relatively short order with the issues raised by the LCME.鈥

鈥溌槎勾解檚 2009 graduating class,鈥 he noted, 鈥渓ed the country in obtaining their first choice of residency placements in the national competition, organized by the Canadian Resident Matching Service. Our 麻豆传媒 medical graduates also consistently score in the top quartile of Canadian medical students in national licensure exams.鈥

Should 麻豆传媒鈥檚 appeal fail, and the initial finding of the LCME stand, the medical school will have 24 months to fix the issues cited by the LCME. During that period the school would remain accredited. 鈥淭he situation would not compromise our students鈥 ability to qualify as doctors or their acceptance into postgraduate programs of their choice,鈥 said Dr. Marrie. Further, he said, 鈥渋t will not affect our MD program in New Brunswick, which is on track to open as an accredited program in September 2010.鈥


Comments

All comments require a name and email address. You may also choose to log-in using your preferred social network or register with Disqus, the software we use for our commenting system. Join the conversation, but keep it clean, stay on the topic and be brief. Read comments policy.