- © 2007 Canadian Medical Association or its licensors
A medical education training program scheduled to start in New Brunswick in September 2008 will be delayed by at least 1 year, according to Dalhousie University's dean of medicine.
Dr. Harold Cook says the New Brunswick government still hasn't accepted a 30-seat proposal that was submitted by the Halifax-based university in June 2006. Once an agreement is reached, it will take 2 years to get the program up and running.
New Brunswick Health Minister Michael Murphy has pledged “decisive action” on the file “very soon,” but stressed he cannot speak for cabinet. The government remains committed to the project, he says.
Murphy has been working on the medical education training program with the department of Post-Secondary Education and Training almost daily since taking over the health portfolio last fall. It's a complex project, involving 4 Anglophone regions: Saint John, Moncton South-East, Fredericton and Miramichi, he said.
Dealing with the planned resignations of 14 of the Saint John Regional Hospital's 17 emergency doctors last January also took up a lot of time, said Murphy.
Former premier Bernard Lord had set September 2007 as the initial start-up for the program. That was bumped to 2008 under Premier Shawn Graham.
Although details about the proposed program are scarce, it's expected students will spend most of their first 2 academic years in Saint John, while their third and fourth years will involve clinical rotations at hospitals in the 4 Anglophone regions.
Having a New Brunswick–based program is expected to help the province recruit and retain doctors.
The provincial government is expected to pay Dalhousie $55 000 per student per year, the same price the Nova Scotia government is paying the university to train doctors. That's $1.65 million a year, or about $6.6 million over 4 years for 1 graduating class.
In addition, there will be infrastructure costs to accommodate the program at the University of New Brunswick Saint John campus.
Memorial University in Newfoundland was involved in initial discussions about the Anglophone program with the province and Dalhousie, but dropped out in March 2006. The plan to combine the schools required too heavy a financial commitment and the logistics were too complicated, according to Dean of Medicine Dr. James Rourke.
The idea of an Anglophone medical training program was raised after officials at the Université de Moncton and Université de Sherbrooke presented a proposal for a 24-seat French-language medical training program to be based in Moncton.
Under the Centre du formation medical du Nouveau-Brunswick, which started last fall, Sherbrooke students finish their third year in New Brunswick and stay in the province for their fourth year and 2 years of internships.