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Medical History

Dreamers, Skeptics, and Healers

The Story of BC's Medical School

by (author) Wendy Cairns, John Cairns & David Ostrow

Publisher
Page Two Books, Inc.
Initial publish date
Apr 2021
Category
History, General, Post-Confederation (1867-)
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781989603895
    Publish Date
    Apr 2021
    List Price
    $50

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Description

The UBC Faculty of Medicine at 70 Years
A legacy of care.
Hailed as one of the world’s top-ranked medical schools, the UBC Faculty of Medicine is globally recognized as a leader in medical education and health sciences research. In celebration of its 70th anniversary, this richly illustrated history is an inspiring reflection on the Faculty’s rise from humble beginnings to its standing today as a beacon of excellence.
Unlikely though it may seem in 2021, the Faculty’s creation was threatened from the moment British Columbia entered Confederation in 1871. Proposals for a provincial medical school encountered myriad challenges. There was no university until 1915. Financial barriers, the apathy of provincial politicians and conflict among physicians as to the need for and the optimal location of a medical school and a potential university hospital led to recurrent setbacks and delay. It took eight decades for the dream to become a reality. And yet, establishing the medical school was only the first of many milestones to achieve over great odds.
When the first cohort of students arrived in 1950, they discovered their school—really, just a few huts—was located far from the centre of Vancouver, on land cleared in the forests of Point Grey, and with little in the way of permanent university buildings. With limited budgets and resources, dean after dean struggled to ensure high quality medical education and to establish medical research. And the outcome? The Faculty of Medicine not only survived, it thrived.
Today, the Faculty’s medical undergraduate program is the fourth largest in North America. Its faculty members have garnered numerous illustrious awards—including the Nobel Prize. Its province-wide, distributed undergraduate and postgraduate program, established in 2004 as the first of its kind in Canada, is developing a new generation of doctors, bringing health education to remote regions and communities, and enhancing the quality of health care. And its researchers continue to make breakthroughs in the priority areas of precision health, cancer, brain and mental health, heart and lung health, population health and chronic diseases as well as across the breadth of health and life sciences.

About the authors

Contributor Notes

Wendy Elizabeth Cairns was a UBC graduate who worked at the electronic library of the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety in Hamilton, ON. Returning to BC in 1997, she began a history of the Faculty of Medicine at UBC. Her extensive research, interviews and eloquent prose languished following her premature death but were taken up and extended by Doctors Cairns, Stuart and Ostrow, becoming the foundation of this book.
John Allan Cairns, is an extensively published clinical and academic cardiologist, and was Dean of UBC’s Faculty of Medicine from 1996-2003. He led efforts, in conjunction with UBC and two provincial governments, to conceptualize, secure the funding for, and establish university partnerships to enable the doubling of medical student enrolment centered at UBC, but distributed throughout the province.
Dr. David Ostrow is Emeritus Professor of Respiratory Medicine at the University of British Columbia. In 1995 he chaired the development of the Faculty of Medicine’s problem-based curriculum. He was the President and Chief Executive Officer of Vancouver Coastal Health Authority from 2009, retiring in April 2014.
Gavin CE Stuart served as Dean of Medicine at UBC from 2003-2015 during which time he led the implementation of the distributed medical program across BC. He also held the role of UBC Vice-Provost Health. Previously he was Vice-President of the Alberta Cancer Board. He is currently Professor and Interim Head of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and a practicing academic gynecologic oncologist in Vancouver.