By Matthew Moore
(Published by CBC News)
Working at the Eskasoni Health Centre is like coming home for a new doctor and a new nurse practitioner.
Athanasius Tanas Sylliboy of Eskasoni started working as a nurse practitioner at the centre in April. Dr. Carl Marshall, originally from nearby Potlotek First Nation, started his family practice at the centre earlier this month.
Read moreBy Ashley Thompson
(Published by the Kings County Advertiser/Register)
Support is rolling in for a community-based campaign that aims to help the Soldiers Memorial Hospital Foundation meet a million-dollar goal.
Read moreAs a response to the COVID-19 pandemic, social workers Holly Richardson and Loralee Smith, who work with collaborative family practice teams in Annapolis County, thought that making check-in phone calls to support community members, particularly seniors, would be helpful.
Richardson’s collaborative family practice team members were ready to start making these calls after hearing about her idea.
Read moreBy Lauren MacDougall
This spring, Dr. Raed Azer, a family physician with the collaborative family practice team in New Waterford, Cape Breton, adopted an innovative approach to continue to safely provide care to his patients during the worldwide pandemic.
In response to Coronavirus (COVID-19) and the provincial Public Health directives (e.g. social distancing), Nova Scotia Health Authority’s (NSHA) Virtual Care team set health care providers up with Zoom for Healthcare, a secure virtual care platform
Read moreBy Deidre Taylor
Susan Savage joined the collaborative family practice team at North Queens Medical Centre in Caledonia two years ago as a nurse practitioner.
The collaborative practice’s two nurse practitioners and family doctor provide primary care for residents of the small, close-knit community, along with those living in the surrounding areas.
At the end of March, Savage began providing virtual appointments for patients using Zoom for Healthcare, like many others, once it became available for health care providers in Nova Scotia.
Read moreBy Margaret Angus
“Not all patients feel comfortable in a doctor’s office,” shared Heather Burton, member of the Kings and Annapolis Network of Patient and Family Advisors.
“We know in order to have good patient experience, it starts with the first phone call and the first time you walk in.”
That’s why this group of volunteer patient and family advisors (PFA) decided to host a workshop for office staff from local collaborative family practice teams and chronic disease teams in the summer of 2019.
Read moreBy Fraser Mooney
By mid-December, most high school students are looking forward to Christmas break.
But at Digby General Hospital an enthusiastic group of students were looking forward to learning about health care careers.
On Dec. 12 a health care panel and discussion took place at Digby General Hospital to introduce local high school students to different professionals and job opportunities in health care.
The goal was to encourage students to explore–and hopefully pursue–a health care career.
Read moreBy Melanie Jollymore
Any time his stage-four COPD flares up, Sheldon Williams can end up spending several breathless hours in the emergency room, waiting to be assessed and given the medication he needs to clear the obstructive secretions from his compromised lungs.
The Shelburne-area resident is eager to see if his participation in a health services study through the Shelburne Collaborative Family Practice will improve his access to timely care when he has a flare.
Read moreBy Deidre Taylor
The Avon Medical Clinic in Windsor was established just over a year ago, when two family physicians, a family practice nurse, a nurse practitioner and clerical staff came together to form a collaborative family practice team.
When a variety of health professionals work together as part of a collaborative family practice team, it creates capacity within the team to be able to efficiently see patients, especially when patients see the most appropriate provider for their health care needs.
Read moreBy Nayo Upshaw
Nurse practitioner Heidi Fairbanks-Smith values the community connections she’s been able to establish.
“I like the social aspect and personal connections; I know a lot of people and they know me,” said Fairbanks-Smith, who works out of the River Hebert Primary Health Care clinic.
Every day is different for Fairbanks-Smith, an important member of her clinic’s collaborative health care team.
Read more