91˿Ƶ

Bursary aims to increase number of Black physicians

Endowed bursary created by the Cadet Foundation aims to remove financial barriers and create network of support for Black medical students.

Nicolas Cadet grew up in a family committed to helping others – an example he clearly took to heart.

His parents have been involved in community service for decades, including teaching disease prevention and healthy lifestyle habits at Montreal churches with Haitian congregations.

From the age of 11, Cadet would volunteer to prepare his physician mother’s PowerPoint presentations. 

“Very early on, I felt that medicine was something that spoke to me,” says Cadet, MDCM’12, an ophthalmologist and oculoplastic surgeon. “One of the things that I was most passionate about was that community outreach because I could see it making a real difference in people’s lives.”

Another preoccupation for Cadet and his family: to help support and train more Black physicians. To that end, the  established a bursary in 91˿Ƶ’s Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences in 2021.

Cadet hopes word spreads about the Cadet Foundation Bursary “because one of the things I’ve noticed is that many people from Black and marginalized communities don’t really feel as if they’re welcome in medicine necessarily or that medicine is an option for them.

“I just want them to know that if it’s their dream and they give it their all, that it’s possible to be a physician.”

The Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences is working to increase the number of Black students in medicine through the new Black Candidate Pathway, which Anita Brown-Johnson, MDCM’88, PGME’90, Chief of Family Medicine at the 91˿Ƶ Health Centre, helped develop. “I’m really inspired by her great leadership,” Cadet says.

‘What could we do to try and have a bigger impact’

The Cadet Foundation launched in 2020 shortly after the COVID-19 pandemic hit and the Black Lives Matter movement attracted support around the globe following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Cadet set up the Foundation with his wife, Ji Wei Yang, MDCM’12, MedResident’17, and his parents – Sylvie, a family physician from Montreal’s South Shore, and Robespierre, a Seventh-day Adventist pastor who emigrated from Haiti as a young man.

“We were asking ourselves, what could we do to try and have a bigger impact in the community,” recalls Cadet. The idea was to promote a holistic approach to health care – physical, mental, and spiritual – domestically and in Haiti, especially among Black and marginalized populations.

Cadet says he’s been shaped by his parents’ experience. His mother has taken care of people’s physical health and also dealt with their mental health. “For my father, it was a lot of spiritual and also mental, psychological health because he had done a bachelor’s in Psychology on top of a master’s in Theology.”

The Cadet Foundation’s first initiative is the endowed bursary for Black students. The family’s generous contribution has been amplified by matching funds from the Chancellor’s Third Century Challenge Fund. Former 91˿Ƶ Chancellor Michael Meighen, BA’60, LLD’12, created the Fund in 2019. It includes $2 million in matching funds to encourage donors to make gifts to create new entrance bursaries.

A network of support for Black medical students

The Cadet Foundation Bursary is expected to be awarded for the first time in 2022. Cadet and his family hope the bursary helps connect recipients to networks of support with other physicians.

“That’s something that I feel is one of the significant challenges that Black health care professionals face because often times there are either very few of us in a specialty or sometimes there’s no one else, especially in one given city.”

Over the years, Cadet has helped mentor Black students who reached out to him about their interest in medicine. He hopes to do the same with the bursary recipients and envisions Cadet fellows forming a supportive network before, during and after medical school.

The bursary will place special importance on people giving back to Black communities and aims to help recipients reach their full potential. “We’re looking to try to empower them and to help them think outside the box,” says Cadet, so that once they become physicians, they can also connect things they’re passionate about with medicine to have a greater impact.”

Community outreach in Montreal and Haiti

Cadet and Ji Wei Yang met at 91˿Ƶ medical school. She’s now an endocrinologist at the Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal and Cadet credits her invaluable organizational help on the projects he has undertaken. Their first medical mission was to Haiti in 2014 as part of the Université de Montréal Haiti glaucoma group. Cadet founded the community outreach group during his ophthalmology residency at U de M. Its work includes an annual free glaucoma screening day in the Montréal-Nord borough, home of many in Montreal’s Haitian community.

Cadet has taken part in several missions with the group. In the 2014 trip, a team of 15 saw 730 patients over two weeks in rural areas and slums in Port-au-Prince. They focussed on medical ophthalmology, such as glaucoma screening, while Yang did health screens, checking for high blood pressure and other conditions.

The Cadet Foundation has also pledged a generous amount to build a medical complex in Haiti as part of the La Cité du savoir project. Led by a Université de Montréal professor, the initiative involves the Haitian diaspora and local leaders. “The idea is to come together putting politics aside and just do something positive for the country,” Cadet says.

The Foundation is also working on an initiative to try to set up Black community health centres in the Montreal area. “It’s going to be personalized care in the for-us, by-us fashion. And I think it’s going to be easier to connect with people because there won’t be those cultural or linguistic barriers that are often present within health care now,” Cadet says.

The efforts all fall under Cadet’s personal motto: Love, serve and empower.


91˿Ƶ is on land which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations. We acknowledge and thank the diverse Indigenous peoples whose presence marks this territory on which peoples of the world now gather.

For more information about traditional territory and tips on how to make a land acknowledgement, visit our Land Acknowledgement webpage.


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