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Hospital learning centre a meeting place for medical minds

The Roman Forum was not built in a day, and it will no doubt take a year or two before Northern Health has its staff learning centre.

The Roman Forum was not built in a day, and it will no doubt take a year or two before Northern Health has its staff learning centre.

But once complete, the $10 million building will be the centrepiece for the meeting of medical minds -- giving doctors, nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, and speech language pathologists a venue for guest speakers and the means to share their own knowledge and ideas with the rest of the world.

"Anything that improves the education of health care professionals, improves patient care," said Dr. Bert Kelly, executive director of the Northern Medical Society, who was on hand at the Civic Centre Saturday when Liberal MLAs Shirley Bond and Pat Bell announced the project.

"The guy in Dease Lake can't be coming down here every afternoon for a meeting, but there's no reason why technology can't bring him into the room. It's vital for him to be up to date. One of the reasons rural areas have trouble recruiting doctors is they feel cut off and it's the same with nurses and all medical staff. They feel isolated, and they are, but technology's gotten around all that now."

Kelly said the new facility will put Prince George and its health facilities on a more level playing field with Kelowna, which received a provincially-built medical learning centre three years ago.

Unlike Kelowna's staff learning centre, the 150-seat Prince George building won't be shaped like a traditional amphitheatre, with seated guests looking down on a stage or central speaker's platform. Instead, to allow one or more meetings to run concurrently, the flat-shaped building will have moveable walls that can easily be changed to suit the needs of the user groups.

"We wanted a meeting area which would be versatile and it's not just for physicians, it's for everybody," said Kelly. "We need to be able to accommodate diverse groups. The second thing we wanted was that it would act as a library. We don't need books anymore but what we do need is high-tech linkages to the databases.

"The third thing we needed was the ability to have these meetings beamed out all over the north so that other people in other areas could take part in the meetings and listen to our speaker in real time."