The second edition of the Occitanie Young Doctors Forum will take place on Saturday, October 21, at the Corum in Montpellier. Organized by the Languedoc-Roussillon Residents’ Union, in partnership with the Occitanie Regional Health Agency (ARS) and the Occitanie Region, this event is designed for residents in the region, who will have the opportunity to meet key figures in their future professional lives.

The opening remarks by Didier Jaffre, Director General of the Occitanie Regional Health Agency; Vincent Bounes, Vice President for Health of the Occitanie Region; Michael Delafosse, Mayor of Montpellier; and Isabelle Laffont, Dean of the Montpellier-Nîmes Faculty of Medicine, will set the tone for the FJMO.

A forum for learning and sharing

The day’s program includes an opening roundtable discussion on optimizing clinical time, a series of workshops on different practice models, information booths on startup assistance, and opportunities to network with healthcare professionals.

“The establishment of medical practices and private medical practice are sources of debate and concern, where patient expectations, political decisions, public health objectives, and professional practice all intersect. What solutions can be proposed in light of this alarming situation? The medical workforce will continue to face challenges over the next decade.”

A challenge for medical attractiveness

Medical recruitment is a major challenge for Occitanie, which is facing a growing shortage of healthcare providers. This forum offers young doctors an opportunity to explore the various options for setting up practice in the region and to meet with professionals who can support them in their career plans.

A forum to shape the future

This forum offers medical residents in Occitanie a unique opportunity to learn about the various aspects of their future careers. It will enable them to make informed decisions about their practice model and where to set up their practice.

For more information about the program and registration, please contact UNILR.

 

During the week of October 16–20, 2023, the faculty will host the exhibition “That Crab That Pinches Our Butts,” and Barbara PASTRE GLATZ (La Montpellier Reine) will lead a talk in which the models featured in the exhibition will share stories about their new lives.

We hope to see many of you there on Thursday, October 19, at 6:00 p.m. in the UPM lecture hall on the Arnaud de Villeneuve Health Campus.

The 800th-anniversary student cap, donated by the medical students, will be displayed in the lobby of the Arnaud de Villeneuve Health Campus. The unveiling ceremony will take place on November 6, 2023. This intangible cultural heritage is being passed down; student tradition has never been more alive than at the world’s oldest medical school still in operation.

For the second year in a row, the Agnes McLaren Association is hosting a medical award with a prize of €4,000! Check out the program for the 2023 award ceremony.

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A consultation for a stuffed animal? 

As they have done every year since 2002, our students in the medicine, midwifery, and speech-language pathology programs (through the ACM, AMESF, and Dislalie student associations) join forces with students in the pharmacy, dentistry, physical therapy, and occupational therapy programs to organize an event that is as unique for its warmth as it is for its practical value: the Teddy Bear Hospital.

The concept? Healthcare students welcome preschoolers from underprivileged neighborhoods to introduce them to the hospital environment and health checkups through a fun role-playing activity: their stuffed animals will be the “patients” for the day!

A goal that endures 

What is the goal of this event? To make doctor’s visits less intimidating. As we know, the medical environment can be very intimidating and overwhelming, especially for children… Through this initiative, the students hope to change the cold and frightening image of doctors that many people have.

A multidisciplinary hospital 

The event, which will take place this year from April 11 to 13, will feature a mini medical clinic for children’s stuffed animals, spread across 12 preschool classrooms. A real “mini-hospital”!

The program features no fewer than 15 multidisciplinary care booths! To prepare for working with children, the students running the booths received special training from a child psychiatrist at Montpellier University Hospital.

Booths run by medical students (ACM)

  • Cardiology
  • Nutrition
  • Pulmonology
  • Surgery
  • General Practice
  • Ophthalmology
  • Gastroenterology

Booth run by maieutics students (AMESF)

Booth run by speech-language pathology students (DISLALIA)

Booths run by students from other health-related programs: 

  • Pharmacy
  • Nurse
  • Physical Therapist
  • Radiological Procedures
  • Occupational therapist
  • Dental