A Career in Health Outside Major Centres

Have you ever thought about working in the Far North? After more than 6 years in the emergency room in Joliette, Quebec, Samuel Demontigny decided to try adventure. For a little over a year, the 27-year-old nurse has had contracts in various James Bay communities, in northern Quebec.

“The main advantage is independence,” he explains. “When a patient arrives, I don’t just do a short assessment as I would have done in triage at emergency, I do a complete clinical examination, much like a doctor would do…”

Doctors intervene much less in his work than in a large centre, he adds. In the Far North, nurses have an expanded role. They can do diagnoses and prescribe certain medicines. The care of the patient is complete.

“It’s not like in emergency where I would look after a patient for a day and then he would disappear into the system,” he says.

A valuable role

The weeks are demanding, acknowledges the young nurse. But even though he works 20 hours more than in a large centre, he feels less exhausted, due to the value he draws from his work.

“You get the impression of being really useful, being used to your full potential,” he explains. “In a hospital, I had the impression of doing mass production work. I felt like a number. Here I am Samuel, both to my colleagues and my patients. ”

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