CSVII CREATING SPACE VII SYMPOSIUM - DREAMING THE MYTH ONWARD - Canadian Association for ...
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DREAMING THE MYTH ONWARD
CSVII
CREATING SPACE VII SYMPOSIUM
Arts, humanities, and the social sciences in La place des arts, des humanites et des sciences
the education of health professionals sociales dans la formation des futurs
professionnels de la sante
A symposium associated with the Canadian Un symposium associe avec la Conference
Conference on Medical Education (CCME) canadienne sur l'education medicale (CCEM)
APRIL 28 & 29 2017
RBC CONVENTION CENTRE | WINNIPEG MBTABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE 1 WELCOME PAGE 2 CREATING SPACE AT SEVEN YEARS OLD PAGE 4 KEYNOTE SPEAKERS & SPECIAL GUESTS PAGE 8 LOCATIONS PAGE 9 SCHEDULE - FRIDAY APRIL 28 PAGE 10 SCHEDULE - SATURDAY APRIL 29 AM PAGE 12 SCHEDULE - SATURDAY APRIL 29 PM PAGE 14 SIGHTSEEING IN WINNIPEG PAGE 16 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
WELCOME
Welcome to Winnipeg, the geographical centre of our country. We are elated
to be hosting Creating Space VII.
We all have stories that follow us throughout our careers; patients we can't
forget and stories we would sometimes rather not remember. This is the heart
of clinical practice, the richness and the exacting price of a life in
medicine.
In the last several years, the medical humanities have moved from the
margins of medical education into the mainstream. With that shift has come a
greater understanding of how our own histories, both past and present, shape
the choices we make, the care we provide, and the way we move through our
practice. The history that has been "taken" can also be returned to the
storyteller. In returning to the story, as with your arrival in Winnipeg, you are
approaching the symbolic heart.
Dr. Jillian Horton, BA MA MD FRCPC
BIENVENUE
Bienvenue à Winnipeg, le centre géographique de notre pays. Nous sommes
choyé d'être hôte pour Creating Space VII.
Nous avons tous des histoires mémorables qui nous suivent tout au long de
nos carrières, tel que des patients inoubliables et des histoires que nous ne
voulons pas nous rappeler. C'est au coeur de la pratique de la clinique de
comprendre cette richesse et le prix exact d'une vie en médecine.
Au courant des dernières sept années les humanités médicales se sont
déplacés de l'éducation vers le courant ordinaire. C'est avec ce changement
qu'une meilleure compréhension que notre histoire, du passé et du présent,
forme nos choix, les soins que nous donnons et la façon dont il faut
manoeuvre au sein de la profession. L'histoire qui a été ''prise'' peut être
retourné aux raconteurs. En retournant à l'histoire, avec votre arrivez à
Winnipeg, vous approchez ce coeur symbolique.
Dr. Jillian Horton, BA MA MD FRCPC
- PAGE 1 -CREATING SPACE AT SEVEN YEARS OLD
Now held annually, "Creating Space" was founded by Allan Peterkin, MD
(UToronto) and Pamela Brett-MacLean, PhD (UAlberta) after they attended the
Association of Medical Humanities (AMH), UK meeting held in Truro, Cornwall in
2010. First hosted at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto in 2011, Creating Space
was structured to coincide with the Social Sciences Perspectives on Health
Professions Education Symposium metting that was held by the Wilson Centre
(UToronto), and the Canadian Conference on Medical Education (CCME). The
enthusiastic feedback received was indicative of a growing community desiring to
make this meeting an annual event.
Creating Space is associated with the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences in
Medicine (AHSSM) Educational Interest Group, itself sponsored by the Canadian
Association for Medical Education (CAME). Creating Space has been organized by
either the faculty of medicine hosting CCME or those closely associated with it.
The initial enthusiasm in Toronto was followed by successful meetings in Banff,
Quebec City, Ottawa, Vancouver and Montreal.
Each year, Creating Space has continued to grow as an inviting venue for artists,
educators, social scientists, clinicians, and learners from a multitude of
disciplines who are interested in exploring the use and contribution of the arts,
humanities and social sciences (AHSS) in the education of health professionals
across Canada. The changing venues have allowed both the celebration of local
initiatives while at the same time providing opportunities for conversations with
national and international colleagues.
WHITE COAT, WARM ART
While at CCME, please do take the time to view the White Coat, Warm Art
exhibition, founded in 2010 by UBC's Dr. Carol Ann Courneya and co-
directed with Dr. Pamela Brett-MacLean. Featured annually at CCME, this
deeply impressive display of art by medical students, medical residents,
faculty, and other practitioners involved in health professions education
attests to the striking creativity and commitment to effective,
compassionate care that exists in our many schools and education
programs.
- PAGE 2 -CREATING SPACE A SEPT ANS
Creating Space a été fondée en 2010 par Pamela Brett-MacLean, PhD (Université de
l’Alberta) et Allan Peterkin, MD (Université de Toronto) après ils ont assisté à la
réunion de l’Association of Medical Humanities (AMH), tenue à Truro (R-U). La pré-
conférence inaugurale s’est tenue en 2011 à l’Hôpital Mount-Sinaï à Toronto, et elle
a été structure afin de coïncider avec le symposium Perspectives des sciences
sociales sur l’éducation des professionnels de la santé, soutenu par le Centre
Wilson (Université de Toronto) ainsi que la Conféfence canadienne sur l’éducation
médicale (CCÉM). Les commentaires initiaux ont indiqué une communauté
grandissante et enthousiaste avec la volonté de se réunir chaque année.
Creating Space est associée au groupe d’intérêt Arts et sciences humaines et
sociales en médecine (ASHSM), lui-même parrainé par l’Association canadienne pour
l’éducation médicale (ACEM). Chaque année, Creating Space est organisée soit par
les facultés de médecine qui participant à l’organisation de la CCÉM, soit par
celles-là qui sont indirectement associées à cette activité. La passion initiale à
Toronto a été suivie par des réunions fructueuses à Banff, Québec, Ottawa,
Vancouver et Montréal.
Creating Space continue à s’élargir comme foyer accueillante et attrayante pour
artistes, pedagogues, chercheurs des humanités et sciences sociales, médecins, et
étudiants en provenance d’une multiplicité des disciplines, tous unis par leur intérêt
d’explorer l’utilité ainsi que les contributions des arts, des humanités, et des
sciences sociales à l’éducation des professionnels de la santé. L’organisation à tour
de rôle de la Creating Space met en avant des initiatives locales, et, au même
temps, facilite des opportunités de s’engager dans les dialogues locaux, nationaux,
et internationaux.
ARTISTES EN BLOUSE BLANCHE
Pendant votre séjour à la CCÉM, nous vous invitons à render visite à
l’exposition Artistes en blouse blanche, fondée en 2010 par Dre Carol
Ann Courneya de l’UBC et codirigée avec Dre Pamela Brett-MacLean.
Maintenant présentée annuellement à la CCÉM, cette exposition très
impressionnante d’œuvres d’art créées par étudiants en médecins
résidents, membres de corps professoraux, et autres praticiens de la
santé qui participant à l’éducation des professionnels de la santé
témoigne de la créativité époustouflante et de l’engagement envers la
prestation de soins bienveillants et efficacies que l’on retrouve dans
nos nombreux programmes éducatifs.
- PAGE 3 -KEYNOTE SPEAKER
RITA CHARON
Rita Charon is a general internist and literary scholar at Columbia University
who originated the field of narrative medicine. She is Professor of Medicine
and founder and Executive Director of the Program in Narrative Medicine at
Columbia.
She completed an M.D. at Harvard in 1978 and a Ph.D. in English at
Columbia in 1999, concentrating on the works of Henry James. Her research
focuses on the consequences of narrative medicine practice, reflective
clinical practice, and health care team effectiveness.
At Columbia, she directs the Foundations of Clinical Practice faculty
seminar, the Narrative and Social Medicine Scholarly Projects Concentration
Track, the required Narrative Medicine curriculum for the medical school, and
Columbia Commons: Collaborating Across Professions, a medical-center-wide
partnership devoted to health care team effectiveness.
She inaugurated and teaches in the Master of Science in Narrative Medicine
graduate program at Columbia. She has lectured or served as Visiting
Professor at many medical schools and universities in the US and abroad,
teaching narrative medicine theory and practice. She has received a
Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio residency, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and
research funding from the NIH, the NEH, the American Board of Integral
Medicine, the Josiah Macy Jr. Foundation, and several additional private
foundations.
She has published in The New England Journal of Medicine, Lancet, JAMA,
Annals of Internal Medicine, Narrative, Henry James Review, Partial Answers,
and Literature and Medicine.
She is the author of Narrative Medicine: Honoring the Stories of Illness
(Oxford University Press, 2006) and co-author of Principles and Practice of
Narrative Medicine (Oxford University Press, 2017). She is co-editor of Stories
Matter: The Role of Narrative in Medical Ethics (Routledge, 2002) and
Psychoanalysis and Narrative Medicine (SUNY Press, 2008). She is working on
a book about creativity and doubt in the sciences and the arts.
- PAGE 4 -ORATEUR PRINCIPAL
RITA CHARON
Rita Charon MD, PhD est professeure de médecine clinique et directrice du
programme de médecine narrative au collège de médecine et de chirurgie de
l’Université Columbia. Médecin interniste en soins primaries, la Dre Charon a
obtenu un doctorat en littérature anglaise lorsque’elle a constaté la place
centrale qu-occupe le fait de raconteur et d’écouter des récits dans le
travail de médecins et la vie des patients. Elle a fair paraître de
nombreuses publications et présenté de nombreuses conferences pour
expliquer comment une formation en récits narratifs contribue à developer
l’empathie et la réflexion chez les professionnels de la santé et les
étudiants.
- PAGE 5 -SPECIAL GUESTS
BARB SIBBALD
Barbara Sibbald, an award-winning health journalist and author of two
nonfiction books and two novels, has published extensively in magazines and
newspapers, such as the Ottawa Citizen, the Toronto Star, Chatelaine and the
Globe and Mail. She began working at CMAJ in 1998 as an associate editor
in the news department and became editor of that department in 2003.
Articles that she coauthored were twice cited for the Michener Award for
meritorious public service in journalism. Her work has also been recognized
with the Canadian Association of Journalists’ investigative journalism prize
(2006), as well as two gold awards for breaking news from the Canadian
Business Press. Two of her short stories were nominated for the Journey
Prize in fiction writing.
DR. SHANE NEILSON
Shane Neilson was born in New Brunswick. He attended the University of New
Brunswick, where he completed his BSc. He obtained his MD from Dalhousie
University, his MFA from the University of Guelph, and is currently a PhD
candidate at McMaster University. Neilson is the author of five collections
of poetry, and a two-time winner of the Arc Poetry Magazine Poem of the
Year Award.
WAB KINEW
Wab Kinew was named by Postmedia News as one of "9 Aboriginal movers and
shakers you should know." He is the Associate Vice-President for Indigenous
Relations at The University of Winnipeg and a correspondent with Al-jazeera
America. In 2012, he hosted the acclaimed CBC-TV documentary series 8th Fire. His
hip-hop music and journalism projects have won numerous awards. He is a member
of the Midewin. Wab is also an Honourary Witness for the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission of Canada, is the MLA for Fort Rouge and is currently in the running to
lead Manitoba's NDP Party. He lives in Winnipeg with his family.
- PAGE 6 -INVITÉS SPÉCIAUX
BARB SIBBALD
Barbara Sibbald est journaliste de santé, auteur, et a publié de nombreux
articles de magazines et de journaux dont le Ottawa Citizen, Toronto Star,
Chatelaine et le Globe and Mail. Elle a commencé à travailler au JAMC en
1998 en tant que rédactrice adjointe au service des nouvelles et est
devenue rédactrice en chef de ce département en 2003. Des articles dont
elle a été co-auteure, ont été cités à deux reprises pour le Prix Michener
pour le service public en journalisme. Son travail a également été reconnu
par le prix du journalisme d’investigation de l’Association canadienne des
journalistes (2006), ainsi que par deux prix d’or du Canadian Business Press.
Deux de ses nouvelles ont été nominées pour le Prix Journey dans l’écriture
de fiction
DR. SHANE NEILSON
Shane Neilson est originaire du Nouveau-Brunswick. Il détient un B.Sc. de
l’Université du Nouveau-Brunswick. Il a obtenu un doctorat en medicine de
l’Université Dalhousie, une maitrise en beaux-arts de l’Université de Guelph,
et il complete présentement son doctorat à l’Université McMaster. Neilson
est l’auteur de cinq recueils de poésie et a remporté deux reprises le prix
Poème de l’année de l’Arc Poetry.
WAB KINEW
Wab Kinew a été cité par Postmedia News comme un des 9 aborigènes qui brassent
et changent l'ordre établi. Il est le vice-président associé des relations indigènes à
l'Université de Winnipeg et correspondant pour Al-Jazeera Amérique. En 2012 il
animé la série documentaire 8th Fire. Ses projets journalistiques et sa musique hip-
hop l'ont fait reconnaître pour divers prix. Il est aussi membre du Midewin et il
represent Fort Rouge à l'Assemblée législative du Manitoba. Il vit à Winnipeg avec
sa famille et est un témoin honoraire pour la commission de la réconciliation du
Canada.
- PAGE 7 -SATURDAY LOCATIONS
TAYLOR MCCAFFREY LLP
BEST WESTERN
RBC Convention Centre - Main Room & Breakout Rooms
375 York Ave | Main Site
Best Western Plus Downtown Winnipeg - Parallel Sessions
330 York Ave | 2 Minute Walk From Convention Centre
Taylor McCaffrey LLP - Parallel Session
900 - 400 Saint Mary Ave | 4 Minute Walk From Convention Centre
- PAGE 8 -FRIDAY APRIL 28
ST. BONIFACE HOSPITAL - SAMUEL N COHEN AUDITORIUM
3:00p Welcome and Opening Remarks
3:15p Compassion Grand Rounds and Keynote Address by Rita Charon
4:30p Opening Reception
5:30p FEATURED PRESENTATIONS
A Medicine and Humanities Program at the University of Ottawa and Beyond:
Development and Implementation - Susan Lamb & co.
The Medicine and the Humanities International Program: A Set of Tools to
Enhance the Teaching of Humanities in Medicine and Therefore Patient Care -
Maud Medeill & Jean Roy
Medical Humanities Panel Discussion - Lessons Learned, Future Directions
6:30p Dinner
7:15p PRESENTATION AND FEATURED PERFORMANCES
The Longview: A Healthcare Student Journal - Bernice A. Foneska
The Enchanted Loom - Dr. Suvendrini & Peggy Hamilton
Taking Shape: Bread Making and the Art of Professional Identity Formation -
Anne Simmonds and Richard Tang
Sober Second Thoughts - Dr. Sandor Demeter
9:15p Transportation by bus to nearby hotels
- PAGE 9 -SATURDAY APRIL 29 - MORNING
RBC CONVENTION CENTRE
MAIN ROOM (2hrs)
8:00a Sharing our Experience with a Mandatory Workshop in Mindfulness and Narrative
Medicine for 3rd Year Medical Students at the University of Ottawa - Millary
Sanches-Campos, Lynn Bloom, Heather MacLean & Carol Gonsalves
BREAKOUT ROOM 1
8:00a The As-If: Acting as an Empathy Workout - Peggy Hamilton
9:00a Voices in Counterpoint?: A Panel Discussion Exploring the Care and Illness
Narratives of Healthcare Professionals, Parients, and Caregivers- Tracy Moniz,
Paula Rowland, Marie Edwards & Tina Martimianakis
BREAKOUT ROOM 2 (2hrs)
8:00a Short Film Genre: An Innovative, Arts-Based Clinical Teaching Method - Max
Montalvo
BREAKOUT ROOM 3
8:00a Telling our Stories: Reflexivity and Praxis - Ayelet Kuper, Umberin Najeeb, Lisa
Richardson & Cynthia Whitehead
9:00a The Unthought Drawn: Mark-Making as a Reflective Practice in Healthcare - Eva
Marie Stern & Shelley Wall
MAIN ROOM
WORKSHOP
10:30a The Power of Narrative Medicine: Helping clinicians and patients listen to and
tell the complex and unique stories of illness - Rita Charon
12:00p Lunch & Poster Viewing
- PAGE 10 -SATURDAY APRIL 29 - MORNING
OFF-SITE PARALLEL SESSIONS
BEST WESTERN SIDE A (2hrs)
8:00a Imagining the Patient Experience: A Model for the Integration of Medical
Humanities into Case-Based Learning – Adriano Mollica & co.
Confined to a Tokenistic Status: Social Scientists and Humanities Scholars in
Leadership Roles at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) – Mathieu
Albert & co.
Thrown into the World of Independent Practice: From Unexpected Uncertainty to
New Identities – Brett Schrewe
Art as a Medium for Refugees and Medical Students to Express Their
Challenges – Jasjit Singh, Adhilasha Patel, Thuy Linh Do, Jonathan Lincoln Lau,
Dr. Pippa Hall & Ms. Lynn Bloom
Creating Coherent Stories: Humanism in Healthcare, a Qualitative Evidence
Synthesis – Martina Kelly & co.
BEST WESTERN SIDE B (2hrs)
8:00a Left Unsaid: Reflections on Why Narratives Differ – Laurie Pereles & co.
Sylvia Plath’s The Bell Jar in the Context of Narrative Expression and Mental
Illness – Ronald Leung
Teaching is like parenting: Sharing personal information must be (st)age and
context appropriate! - Lesia Waschuk
Re-Educating the Imagination Through Poetic Rhetoric Continuum for a 21st
Century Ethics of Care – Wendy Shilton
10:15a Return to Convention Centre
- PAGE 11 -SATURDAY APRIL 29 - AFTERNOON
RBC CONVENTION CENTRE
MAIN ROOM
12:45p Don't mourn, organize - Keynote Address by Barb Sibbald
1:30 mite achimowin Heart Talk: First Nations Women Expressions of the
Heart Health | Community-Based Digital Stories to Inform Medican
Education - Lorena Sekwan Fontaine, Dr. Annette Shultz, Lisa Forbes &
co.
2:30 Where is the Indigenous History of Medicine? - Dr. Lisa Richardson, Sara
Roque & Dr. Allison Crawford
3:30 Past, Present Future - Keynote Address by Wab Kinew
3:50 Closing Remarks
POSTERS
Digital Platforms to Create Space for Medical Students to Cherish the Arts -
Thuy Linh Do, Jasit Singh, Abhilasha Patel, Johnathan Lincoln Lau, Dr. Pippa Hall,
Ms. Lynn Bloom
Digital Stories in Interprofessional Education: Promoting Development of Client-
Centredness - Denyse Blanco & co.
Oops, Can I Write About That? Ethics in Autoethnography - Sydney Pearson &
co.
- PAGE 12 -SATURDAY APRIL 29 - AFTERNOON
OFF-SITE PARALLEL SESSIONS
BEST WESTERN SIDE A (2hrs)
1:30p What Defines the Patients’ Experience of Health – Carol Nash
Caught Between Rubrics: Building a responsive reflection assessment plan for
community engaged learning – Jill Allison. Arthur Travis Pickett & co.
The Role of Jargon in Medicine – Kalyani Sabanayagam
Sing to your patients: The intersection of piano performance and medical
training - Evan Slaney
Poster Q & A
BEST WESTERN SIDE B (2hrs)
1:30p Bridging Through Story: Developing Ethical Reasoning for Canadian Practice
Amongst Internationally Educated Physical Therapists – Trisha Parsons & co.
Using Literature to Teach Psychiatric Problems Relevant to Family Medicine –
Jan Marta
L’homme rapaillé: métaphore de la guérison psycho-sociale/Healing through
Metaphor – Jan Marta
Wood: A Narrative Performance Piece on the Relationship between Creative
Writing and Bipolar Disorder, the Interaction of Creativity and Medication, and
the Discussion of Creativity in Doctor-Patient Interactions – Elizabeth Bolton
TAYLOR MCCAFFREY LLP (2hrs)
1:30p Shane Neilson on Miriam Toew’s Swing Low
Writing Workshop with Shane Neilson & Maurice Mierau
3:15p Return to Convention Centre
- PAGE 13 -SIGHTSEEING IN WINNIPEG
1. THE CANADIAN MUSEUM FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Designed by architect extraordinaire Antoine Predock, Canada’s newest, most eye-catching attraction
dominates the Winnipeg skyline, shining like a beacon. Inside an immersive experience that you can’t
possibly shake awaits as 11 powerful, interactive and awe-inspiring exhibits gradually climb to the
CMHR’s pinnacle, the Tower of Hope (which provides a stunning view of the city). An ambitious
museum meant to foster dialogue and promote change for a better world; the CMHR provides a
stirring account of the human experience unlike anything you’ve ever witnessed.
2. THE EXCHANGE DISTRICT
One of Canada’s architectural marvels, this 30-block district boasts North America’s most extensive
(and handsome) turn of the 20th century buildings. While walking its charming streets you’ll find
some of the city’s trendiest and tastiest spots including small plate restaurants and bistros who
flaunt their exposed brick and beam, up-and-coming and established galleries, vintage and antique
shops and some of the best the city has to offer in coffee and café culture.
3. THE FORKS NATIONAL HISTORIC SITE
Saturated in 6,000 years of history, the meeting of the Red and Assiniboine rivers has always been a
gathering place for people. Across 54 beautiful acres you’ll find a bustling central market,
exceptional dining and accommodations, vast tree-lined paths overlooking all the bends in the
riverbank, a world-class skate park, a children’s play area and water park, and all the best things a
Winnipeg winter has to offer like skate rentals and access to one of the world’s longest skating
trails. It also bridges, via the sexy Esplanade Riel, très-European St. Boniface — with its restaurants,
cafes, artistic flair and francophone flavour — and the downtown core.
4. FORTWHYTE ALIVE
Six hundred-forty acres of pristine prairie beauty are waiting to welcome you to this natural oasis,
which is located right inside the city. In the summer feel the wind in your hair canoeing or sailing
on one of FortWhyte’s several lakes; in the fall sip a locally brewed beer on their restaurant patio
while witnessing North America’s largest animal (the bison) roam in its natural habitat as migrating
birds fill the sky; in winter go cross country skiing on their many trails or take the kids out for a
ridiculously fun day of sliding on the Richardson Rrrun Toboggan slide. No matter what the season,
there is always an adventure to be had at FortWhyte Alive.
5. HERMETIC CODE TOUR AT THE MANITOBA LEGISLATIVE BUILDING
Dan Brown would be at a loss trying to decipher all the meaning enlaced in Canada’s finest
provincial legislative building. The grandiose interior of this ode to Olympus is studded with
hieroglyphics, freemasonic symbols and numeric codes, all of which are unveiled in the Hermetic Code
Tour — a must for anyone with a sense of intrigue. On the top of the building is Winnipeg’s most
beloved citizen, the beaming Golden Boy, our nod to Hermes who was crafted in Paris and holds a
sheath of wheat.
- PAGE 14 -SIGHTSEEING IN WINNIPEG
6. JOURNEY TO CHURCHILL AT ASSINIBOINE PARK ZOO
With the possible exception of seals, everybody loves polar bears — that’s why they are the main
attraction at the sensational Journey to Churchill exhibit at the Assiniboine Park Zoo. Watching these
majestic mammals dive, swim and frolic above youthrough the exhibit’s glass dome will take your
breath away, while the vast terrain also features an incredible selection of animals like muskox,
wolves, moose and seals. The zoo also features uber-rare animals like red pandas and snow leopards,
along with over 200 other species.
7. MANITOBA MUSEUM
How many places do you know that can take you from the towering dinosaurs of the Cretaceous
Period, to across the cosmos through space and time, to the buffalo laden prairie plains all under
one roof? If your answer is none, then you haven’t been to the Manitoba Museum. The nine permanent
galleries in this award-winning heritage and edu-tainment centre will enthral kids and adults alike;
whether you are catching a Planetarium show featuring one of the world’s most advanced projection
systems, to viewing some of Canada’s most important historical artifacts in the Hudson’s Bay
Company Museum Collection, the Manitoba Museum is sure to please.
8. ROYAL CANADIAN MINT
One of Winnipeg’s most beautiful buildings, its reflective glassy exterior is a sight to behold at
sundown, glowing under an orange prairie sky. On the inside you’ll find guided tours that will have
you holding a gold bar worth more than $750,000 (it’s really quite heavy), ogling over the Olympic
gold medals that were made for Vancouver 2010 and witnessing coins beingproduced for 75 different
countries. A trip to the Mint is surely worth every penny.
9. THERMËA BY NORDIK SPA-NATURE
The newest jewel in Winnipeg’s luxuriant-spa crown, Thermëa brings a bit of Scandinavia to the heart
of Canada. Let the stress soak out of you in thermal pools situated amongst the pines; indulge your
senses in Finnish saunas; treat yourself to the best in body treatments and massage therapy and
then finish your day with some exquisite dining — because hey, you are worth it.
10. WINNIPEG ART GALLERY
Architecturally striking and centrally located in the heart of downtown, the WAG houses an
internationally acclaimed collection (with exhibitions having been shown from New York, to Barcelona,
to Tokyo) of nearly 24,000 works featuring a great deal of Canadian and Manitoba-centric pieces,
including the world’s largest collection of contemporary Inuit art. Critically acclaimed touring shows
are also constantly brought in, featuring everything from the Renaissance to Dadaism, to Ancient
Greece and the best in contemporary photography.
https://www.tourismwinnipeg.com/play/top-10-must-sees
- PAGE 15 -ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Dr. Jillian Horton Dr. Allan Peterkin
Max Rady College of Medicine Faculty of Medicine
University of Manitoba University of Toronto
Micheline St-Hilaire Dr. Brett Schrewe
Compassion Project Faculty of Medicine
University of British Columbia
Dawn MacDonald Dr. Pamela Brett-MacLean
Compassion Project Faculty of Medicine
University of Alberta
Dr. Michael McIntyre Dr. Gilles LeClerc
Compassion Project Faculty of Medicine
Université de Montréal
Mark Boiteau Dr. Tamar Rubin
Max Rady College of Medicine Max Rady College of Medicine
University of Manitoba University of Manitoba
Dr. Sally Longstaffe Dr. Eberhard Renner
Max Rady College of Medicine Max Rady College of Medicine
University of Manitoba University of Manitoba
Jim McLaren Maurice Mierau
Max Rady College of Medicine Writer at Large
University of Manitoba University of Manitoba
Roberta Stout
National Collaborating Centre for Aboriginal Health
- PAGE 16 -ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Creating Space VII would not have been possible without
the support and involvement of the following:
University of Manitoba - Department of Internal Medicine
A special thank you to...
Original Website Design Program Creation
Pavel Yarmak, Class of 2020 McKenzie Bentley
Max Rady College of Medicine Max Rady College of Medicine
University of Manitoba University of Manitoba
Cover Art: Anatomy of Yoga Catering
Summer Debreuil, Class of 2018 Le Garage Café
Max Rady College of Medicine 166 Provencher Blvd
University of Manitoba www.garagecafe.ca
- PAGE 17 -See you at Creating Space VIII! Image from MEDICINE by Jillian Horton and GMB Chomichuk
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