Paul Caulford

[2] He was the chief of family medicine and was the community services director at Scarborough Hospital when the SARS epidemic hit Canada hardest in 2003 and he co-founded the Canadian Centre for Refugee and Immigrant Health Care.

[1] Caulford worked as the chief of family medicine and was the community services director at Scarborough Hospital during the SARS epidemic in 2003.

His analysis of the state of Canada's healthcare system and his critique of mankind's treatment of planet earth are quoted in page one of the 2022 book Turkey and the Post-Pandemic World Order.

[4] In 2000,[5] Caulford and nurses Jennifer D’Andrade and Cathy Tersigni co-founded the Community Volunteer Clinic in Scarborough, Ontario after discovering that despite Canada's claim of a universal public healthcare system, thousands of refugee claimants and undocumented forced migrants were being denied access to public healthcare insurance.

Staffed with volunteer nurses, doctors and community members, and dedicated to the care of uninsured refugees and migrants, the Clinic was first of its kind in Canada.

In October 2015, leading up to the federal election the Liberal Party convened a community roundtable at The Canadian Centre for Refugee and Immigrant Health Care in Scarborough.

Volunteer nurses and doctors from CCRIHC opened an on site refugee clinic at the COSTI settlement centre to provide medical care to the arriving Syrians.

https://www.toronto.com/content/tncms/live/ In 2016 Caulford accepted the Rotary District 7070 Wilf Wilkinson International Peace Award on behalf of The Canadian Centre for Refugee and Immigrant Health Care.

[24] Caulford was inducted into the Scarborough Walk of Fame and received his Star in 2022 in recognition of his contributions during the 2003 SARS Crisis in Toronto and for providing health equity to medically uninsured refugees and undocumented newcomers in Canada.