NAC OSCE Exam Success: Essential Strategies for Medical Graduates
Does the snow weather of Canada lure you to work or practice as a doctor there? If yes, then there is a way to fulfil your dream. You must be thinking what? All you need to do is clear the NAC OSCE Exam. The NAC OSCE exam marks a crucial turning point for medical graduates who want to work in Canada—from students to practitioners.
The NAC OSCE also called National Assessment Collaboration Objective Structured Clinical Examination is conducted by the Medical Council of Canada. This test is meant to identify medical graduates or students who wish to pursue Medical Courses in Canada after finishing their undergraduate degrees in medicine, or who wish to practise medicine in Canada.
Dr. Mohamed Soliman doesn’t have any connection to people in Gaza – what he does have is empathy and a desire to help.
“I’ve been waiting for some way to help. Any chance I can help, I am willing to help,” said Soliman from his dental clinic in northwest Calgary. “When this came up I said if you get approval to go, I’m more than happy to go and help those kids from dying. I understand the risk.”
Soliman responded to a call to action by a Calgary family physician who wants to organize a Canadian health convoy to Gaza.
“As a physician activist, the only thing I can do is to be there and provide health care,” said Dr. Mukarram Zaidi, chair of Think for Actions, a Calgary-based national non-profit think tank, focused on the professional development of youth.
Zaidi has written to federal politicians requesting that Canadian authorities allow him and other health-care professionals access to the medical supplies they need to offer help.
Dr. Makis speaks out - The college of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario sent a memo to doctors suggesting their unvaccinated patients may have a mental problem and should be put on psychiatric medication.
10 Common Mistakes to Avoid in the OSCE Examination
Are you someone who has been putting a lot of effort into their NAC OSCE Examination studies and is still not able to clear them? Well, we understand it's annoying. During exams, students generally make silly or unintentional mistakes that lead to bad consequences on their results. Even intelligent students occasionally make mistakes on tests that have an adverse effect on their grades.
One hundred years ago, the former chief medical health inspector of what was then known as Canada's Indian Affairs department walked through the doors of a publishing house in Ottawa.
He carried a manuscript called A National Crime. It was published in 1922 detailing the appalling and deadly health conditions in government-funded residential schools.
On the second National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, Dr. Peter Bryce is being honoured with a plaque in front of the very same building of the publishing house that released his work, James Hope & Sons, at 61 Sparks St.
"It allows us to more critically think about our history and to uplift and celebrate some of these great people who resisted all the wrongdoing," said Cindy Blackstock, executive director of the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society and a member of the Gitxsan Nation.
It was during one of these periods of disciplinary segregation that Dr. Eveson approached Proctor, offering her a way out of solitary if she participated in a research project. In an interview with CBC radio, Proctor reflects, “Now I know that I was being primed with sensory deprivation to prepare me for the other experiments. At that time I didn’t know, I was just told it was for disciplinary reasons” Source
Hiatt's voice from the TV, Good evening. Nick asks, Natalie, what is it? Hiatt continues, Thank you for coming. I am innocent. Natalie says, Look, Nick, Whatever you may be thinking this was not my intention.