CAOT-BC Advisory Committee Member, Gabrielle Trepanier |
Why did you choose OT as a career?
It was not a straight forward choice. It was a mixture of
luck, exploration and discovery that led me to OT. I was out of a very broad
program in cégep (Qc) that included Sciences, Languages, Socials, Arts…I was
(and am still!) interested in everything! I was truly wondering if there was a
career out there that would fulfill my passion for science, creative arts, politics,
and contact with people, while keeping my curiosity about how the world works
satisfied. I wasn’t ready to compromise
on one or more of my many fields of interests. I applied to a variety of
Universities, in OT and other things like engineering. The OT school at McGill is
the one that got back to me first with an acceptation letter. I talked to a
family friend who is an OT, and registered to McGill, still not too sure about
what OT was. My first year in OT brought a mixture of feelings, good and bad,
but confusion was definitively one of them. It isn’t until my first placement, at the end
of the first year of the then B.Sc. that clarity appeared. I was lucky to have
two wonderful supervisors who really impersonated what an OT is – a creative,
resourceful, practical medical professional that gets people DOING what they
WANT to do. I started my second year with
a much different mindset, and each following placement confirmed that this
career was for me. I even participated in a emerging practice placement, where
the goal is to promote the role of OT in a milieu where they were not yet
there. I will always remember, after a
couple of years in OT, explaining to my mother what I was doing at work. She
looked at me and said – “They couldn’t have designed a better profession for
you!” She was right!
Where have you worked over your career?
I have been lucky to work in two different provinces, and in one
territory! I started my career with adults in Québec and worked in the schools
in the Yukon .
Most of my professional career has been in BC, specifically working at Sunny
Hill Health Centre for Children and BC Children’s Hospital.
What
has been your most interesting job?
For the
geographical area, its people, and the need to travel to reach remote schools –
working in the Yukon .
For the broadness of Occupational Performance Issues OT’s get to address, and
the variety in acuity of intervention – working in Paediatric Oncology.
What
do you find most challenging about working as an OT?
Knowing how
much we could accomplish with our skill set, and how it is unmatched by the
financial resources of our health care system. It does get your creativity
going though!
What
do you think will change/shape practice over the next five years?
How much we
make ourselves visible, how we promote the work we do, how we assert our skill
set, how we advocate for the needs we must address, how we find ways to show to
the policy makers the difference in quality of life and cost of care OT can
bring to the table.
What
do you do when you aren't (working, volunteering)? Everything else I love…which is many things,
from Rock Climbing, to crochet, to playing guitar, to reading…and many more!
Hi Gabrielle!
ReplyDeleteI hope you are doing well and glad to see that you are actively involved in clinical practice and professional affairs.
Take care,
Susanne Mak
Hi Susanne,
DeleteIt was great to see you and Dr. Nedelec in PEI! Hope to see you again in Vancouver next year!
Hi Gabrielle,
ReplyDeleteI am a primary teacher in BC and see you translated the Printing Like a Pro Program in French. I would LOVE to have a copy of the alphabet (lettres miniscules et majuscules) for my classroom. For some reason, there are no digital copies of the alphabet available in French on website. Can you help me? Merci beaucoup!!
Hi M. Collins!
DeleteThe best person to contact about Printing like a Pro is Ivonne Montgommery, OT at Sunny Hill Health Centre for Children. It is a wonderful tool but I haven't been involved since 2011 and I am not sure anymore how to get hold of the French version. I know that the English version is accessible for free at this link: http://www.childdevelopment.ca/SchoolAgeTherapy/SchoolAgeTherapyClassResources.aspx . Hope you find it ! Take Care, Gabie