DOCTOR JOBS IN MANITOBA
Are you a Physician Looking for Job in Manitoba?
Manitoba is known for amazingly welcoming people, a recession-resistant economy, and endless beautiful nature: prairies, boreal forests, and tundra ecosystems. Winnipeg, Manitoba’s capital city, offers many museums, theatres, national parks, sports, and leisure attractions to be explored and enjoyed. On the other hand, Manitoba is impressively sturdy in terms of economic stability and investing in real estate.
The economy of Manitoba is largely based on natural resources, agriculture, mining, forestry, energy, and tourism, which is on the rise in post-COVID Canada. According to Statista, Manitoba is experiencing population growth, with a current population of almost 1.4 million. With an upward growth trend and the country's most attractive immigration programs, the doctor shortage is reaching a critical point in Manitoba. One of the most recent and successful initiatives of the Manitoba government, with about $268M in funding, is a new physician services agreement, which covers physician pay and funds to operate their medical practices.
With these professional perks and educational opportunities for physicians, Manitoba is becoming destination #1 for medical talents searching for ambitious opportunities.
Featured Physician Jobs in Manitoba
Currently Available Doctors Positions in Manitoba
Living in Manitoba
A Manitoba-based location is ideal for seizing opportunities arising from expanded free trade. Manitoba offers low operating costs, a dedicated, highly skilled multilingual workforce, abundant, clean, reliable electrical energy, and excellent research and communication facilities with a sophisticated telecommunications and information technology infrastructure.
While the cost of living in Manitoba is very affordable, the province also offers financial support to doctors who are new to the province. The medical community of Manitoba is welcoming and open to newcomers.
Key facts about Manitoba to consider for your relocation and settlement:
- Manitoba’s budget for health care is about $668 million.
- Winnipeg Richardson International Airport makes it easy to reach any big city in Canada, the USA, the UK, and India, as well as summer destinations such as Mexico, Cuba, or Florida coast.
- The population of Manitoba is on the rise, while the physician shortage is becoming historically critical.
- GST tax in Manitoba (HST) 5 %.
- The University of Manitoba offers a wide range of Postgraduate Medical Education (PGME) and opens the door to prominent careers and higher incomes.
Learn more about obtaining a medical practice license in Manitoba: https://physiciansforyou.com/canada/canada-healthcare-articles/obtaining-a-medical-practice-licence-in-canada.html
Manitoba Fun Facts and Interesting Features
It's the Centre Province of Canada
Manitoba is a prairie province, even though a 3rd of the province is covered by grasslands. The province is larger than Great Britain and the Japan Island of Honshu together. Winnipeg, the capital is in the geographic center of Canada. You will find the Centre of Canada sign along route 1 highway stating the distance between the Western to the Pacific and Eastern to the Atlantic Ocean.
Manitoba - Fundamental Life Force
The province name Manitoba comes from the word Manitou which means Fundamental Life Force in the native Cree and Ojibwa language. There is a small town in the province called Manitou.
Province License Plates
Manitobans are known to be the friendliest in Canada and this is reflected in the province’s official license plate slogan, ‘Friendly Manitoba.’
Boreal & Tundra
The province provides various landscapes with the Arctic tundra in the north, and the Boreal Forest and the prairies in the south. Two thirds of the province is covered in a rocky landscape that is covered by trees or tundra, which is part of the Canadian shield.
Over 100,000 Lakes
15% of Manitoba’s surface is covered by lakes. There are over 100,00 lakes throughout the province. There are many towns located on the lakes, along beaches and rivers, allowing locals and visitors plenty of opportunities to explore and enjoy canoeing, kayaking, fishing and swimming during the summer.
Manitoba’s Little Limestone Lake is the finest and largest example of a marl lake in the world, meaning it changes colour with fluctuations in temperature.
Bruce the Mosasaur
In 1974 the largest Mosasaur (a sea reptile going back to the Cretaceous period over 80,000 years ago) was discovered in the far south of the province. He was given the name Bruce, and you can visit him in the Canadian Fossil Discover Centre, in Morden. The area is still a dig site with more mosasaur fossils still being uncovered into the late 2000’s.
Winnie The Pooh Fame
Did you know the real Winnie the Pooh was a black bear originally from our Northern town of White River, Ontario? What's even more fascinating is that he is named after the Canadian capital city of Winnipeg, Manitoba.
In 1914, a Canadian veterinarian named Lt Harry Colebourn bought the bear cub for $20 while serving in the First World War. He named her Winnie, after his native capital city of Winnipeg, and the cub became a mascot for the regiment while stationed in England. When the soldier left for France, he gave Winnie to London Zoo – which is where Christopher Robin saw her and named his own teddy after her. And therein lies the origin of the name Winnie-the-pooh. Here is the Canadian story to share with the kids.
The Real James Bond
Manitoban Soldier William Stephenson is thought by many to be the inspiration for James Bond. As a soldier and fighter pilot serving in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, Royal Flying Corps he was captured multiple times by Germany in World War I and provided the British with volunteer information about Hitler and the government. By World War II he was part of the British Security Coordination, located in New York. British Prime Minister Churchill used him for confidential intelligence between the British and the Americans. His Code name was “Intrepid”. You can find a bronze status of the soldier in downtown Winnipeg and there are several streets in cities across Canada that are named after him.
Icelandic Connections
The town of Gimli sits on Lake Winnipeg, once known as the “New Iceland”, a settlement for Icelandic fishermen in the 1870’s. It has the largest Icelandic population outside of Iceland. You can visit the New Iceland Heritage Museum and explore the history and connections between the two countries.
Famous Manitobans
The singer Neil Young was born in Toronto and moved back to Manitoba when he was 12 years of age with his mother after his parents divorced. His early music career started in Winnipeg and small Manitoba towns, he later worked in folk clubs where he met the Canadian Born folk singer Joni Mitchell. Winnipeg is also home to the band Crash Test Dummies.
Sports
CFL Team the Winnipeg Blue Bombers have appeared in more Grey Cup finals than any other CFL Team and have won 12 times (including 2019 and 2021)
Aurora Borealis Northern Lights
The best place in the world to see Aurora Borealis or northern lights (bright, moving lights in various colors that light up the evening sky) is in the town of Churchill, on the edge of the Hudson Bay. You can also see beluga whales and polar bears there (it is known as the “Polar bear capital of the world”). Take a tour to this one of a kind destination.
Home of Two National Parks and 54 Provincial Parks
Riding Mountain National Park is the most popular park in Manitoba. The park sits atop the Manitoba Escarpment. Consisting of a protected area 2,969 square kilometers (1,146 square miles), the forested parkland stands in sharp contrast to the surrounding prairie farmland. It was designated a national park because it protects three different ecosystems that converge in the area; grasslands, upland boreal and eastern deciduous forests.
Quality Higher Education
Manitoba offers high quality, affordable education, and training throughout the province in rural or urban settings by public or private institutions in both English and French.
The province has 8 public post-secondary institutions and four religious institutions, all of which have degree granting authority, with the exception of the Manitoba Institute of Trades and Technology (MITT). All 12 post-secondary institutions are English-language institutions except for the Université de Saint-Boniface which is a French-language institution.
New Education Alignment Strategy
A 3-year strategy was introduced by the Manitoba government in February 2021, allowing all post-secondary students to have work opportunities included during their studies to better align post-secondary institutions with the needs of the economy. Universities and colleges give students work opportunities, such as co-ops, internships, or land-based learning.
Excellent Immigration Success
Some 15,000 newcomers from all over the world chose to move to Manitoba, as it offers affordable family living, new jobs, careers, and friendly communities to settle in.
A recent survey showed 85 per cent of Manitoba newcomers were working three months after arrival, 76 per cent were homeowners within five years and 95 per cent of families settled permanently in the community, making Manitoba their new home.
About Manitoba
Learn More About Major Manitoba Cities and Townships
East St. Paul is a part of the Winnipeg Metropolitan Area. East St. Paul is its own municipality located 20 minutes from downtown Winnipeg, the capital city of the province of Manitoba. Situated along the Red River, it is an idyllic location with creeks, streams, lakes and natural forest all within the communities of East St. Paul. The community boasts the largest soccer community outside the Winnipeg, and the community centre offers a range of sports programs for all ages including soccer, skating, hockey, basketball, and ringette.
For further information please check the following links:
Stonewall is a town located just 15 minutes north of the capital of Winnipeg, offering its residents a friendly, rural life right next to the big city. Known for its limestone quarries, the community has dedicated a beautiful lakefront Stonewall Quarry Park to these historic structures, and it has been maintained as a natural area with a beautiful park on the edge of town that provides picnic facilities and walking trails for visitors and residents, as well as an interpretive centre with tours. The 80 acres of land includes a campground, man-made lake, baseball diamonds, walking trails, an Interpretive Centre, and the Quarry Park Heritage Arts Centre.
For further information please check the following links: