BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//KT Canada - ECPv6.16.3//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://ktcanada.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for KT Canada
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Toronto
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20160313T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20161106T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20170312T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20171105T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20180311T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20181104T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20190310T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20191103T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20200308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20201101T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20210314T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20211107T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20220313T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20221106T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20230312T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20231105T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220504
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220507
DTSTAMP:20260605T151916
CREATED:20211116T164211Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220428T145215Z
UID:5571-1651622400-1651881599@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Scientific Meeting 2022
DESCRIPTION:  \n\nConference InformationGuest SpeakersRegistrationAgendaProgramFor Abstract Presenters The 2022 KT Canada Annual Scientific Meeting is being held on May 4-6\, 2022 in a *virtual* format. \nThe theme is ‘Developing and evaluating tailored dissemination strategies for different audiences: What have we learned from dissemination science during COVID-19?’ \nThe deadline for submitting abstracts has now passed. \nPlease see the “Guest Speakers” tab for information about conference speakers and the “Registration” tab for information about registering. \nFurther updates will be posted here\, on our Twitter account (@KTCanada) and in the KT Canada weekly newsletter. \nFor questions please contact Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to. \n \nDr. Rinad Beidas \nRinad Beidas\, PhD\, is the Director of the Penn Medicine Nudge Unit; Founder and Director of the Penn Implementation Science Center at the Leonard Davis Institute (PISCE@LDI); and Associate Director at the Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics (CHIBE). She is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry; Medical Ethics and Health Policy; and Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Major scientific discoveries have produced scores of evidence-based practices (EBPs) to improve health and mental health. Unfortunately\, many of these EBPs never make their way into routine health care delivery. Implementation science is the study of methods to promote the systematic uptake of EBPs into routine care with the broad goal of ensuring that scientific discoveries realize their potential and improve people’s lives. Her research program is designed to improve the quality of health and mental health services through implementation science. To conduct this work\, she collaborates closely with key stakeholders\, including patients\, clinicians\, health system leaders\, payers\, and policy-makers\, to develop natural laboratories in which to answer questions of interest. These labs span diverse health care settings\, including community mental health clinics in Philadelphia\, the network of Penn Medicine clinics and hospitals serving individuals with cancer\, health centers providing HIV care\, and the Mental Health Research Network\, a national practice-based research network of 14 healthcare systems. Broadly\, her work entails three primary foci that draw upon the methods of implementation science: (a) understanding the context in which individuals will implement EBPs\, (b) developing implementation approaches that target the factors that may accelerate or hinder implementation\, and (c) conducting pragmatic trials to test these implementation approaches. She does this work across disease areas (e.g.\, mental health\, cancer\, HIV). She has been identified as a leading implementation scientist and has published approximately 200 articles in this area. She serves as MPI on 2 NIH Centers on behavioral economics and implementation science (P50 MH 113840\, P50 CA 244690) and has a strong record of NIH-funded implementation research serving as MPI or PI of 10 NIH grants totaling approximately $30 million dollars. She is deeply committed to training the next generation of implementation scientists and mentors graduate students\, postdoctoral fellows\, and junior faculty through a variety of mechanisms including a T32 at the intersection of implementation science and mental health. Dr. Beidas holds a bachelor of arts in psychology from Colgate University and a doctorate of philosophy in psychology from Temple University. She is the recipient of a number of awards\, including the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies President’s New Researcher Award in 2015; the American Psychological Foundation Diane J. Willis Early Career Award; and the Perelman School of Medicine Marjorie Bowman New Investigator Research Award in 2017. \n  \nNaomi Lee \nNaomi Lee is a Senior Executive Editor at The Lancet. She heads the research section of the journal\, and handles peer review and commissioning across a broad range of subjects including her specialist areas of surgery\, oncology\, digital medicine/AI\, and medical technology.  She is also a vice chair for the ITU/WHO Focus Group on Artificial Intelligence for Health. Naomi joined The Lancet in 2014. Previously she studied medicine at Cambridge University and King’s College London\, before training in surgery\, specialising in urology and working for almost 10 years in the UK. She has completed fellowships in Argentina and Mexico. She has also studied data science at University College London. \n  \nDoriane Etienne \nDoriane is a PhD Candidate in clinical and biomedical sciences at Laval University under the supervision of Holly Witteman\, PhD. She is affiliated with VITAM – Centre de recherche en santé durable and Centre de recherche du CHU de Québec-Université Laval. Trained in public health and health marketing and communication\, she worked as a project manager in public health and then in digital transformation of organizations. She is currently interested in the design\, development and evaluation of user-centered digital health tools in the context of infectious diseases. \n  \nDr. Christine Fahim \nChristine (Tina) Fahim is a research scientist at the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute\, Knowledge Translation program and Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto\, Institute of Health Policy Management and Evaluation. Christine obtained her MSc in Health Systems at the University of Ottawa followed by a PhD in Health Research Methods\, Evidence and Impact from McMaster University. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Johns Hopkins University\, cross-appointed in the Department of Health Policy and Management and Department of Surgery. She holds an Assistant Scientist position in the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She specializes in the science and practice of knowledge translation. \n  \nDr. Sarah Funnell \nDr. Funnell is a First Nations Family Physician and Public Health Specialist. Sarah is an Associate Medical Officer of Health at Ottawa Public Health and Director of Indigenous Health within the Department of Family Medicine at Queen’s University. Previously Sarah offered Primary Care services for refugees\, immigrants\, homeless and Indigenous people. Since March 2020\, Sarah has directed her attention towards supporting the COVID-19 response and advancing Indigenous Health Medical Education. After completing medical school at the University of Ottawa (U of O)\, Dr. Funnell pursued her dual interests in family medicine and epidemiology through the five-year Public Health and Preventive Medicine Residency Program at U of O. She received her Certification in the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CCFP) in 2015 and became a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in 2018. Her background is Algonquin (Kitigan Zibi) and Tuscarora and grew up among the Mississaugas of Alderville First Nation. Sarah is on the Board of Directors of both the Indigenous Physicians Association of Canada and the Board of Directors of the College of Family Physicians of Canada. She is also on the Executive of the National Consortium for Indigenous Medical Education (NCIME). Sarah is past co-Chair of the Indigenous Health Committee at the CFPC and also sits on the Indigenous Health Advisory Committee at the Royal College. She is currently working with both colleges to improve Indigenous Health Curriculum in all residency programs. She is lives in Ottawa with her husband and 3 daughters. In her spare time she speaks to her plants. \n  \nDr. Vincent Larivière \nVincent Larivière holds the Canada Research Chair on the Transformations of Scholarly Communication at the Université de Montréal\, where he is professor of information science and associate vice-president (planning and communications). He is also scientific director of the Érudit journal platform\, associate scientific director of the Observatoire des sciences et des technologies (OST) and regular member of the Centre interuniversitaire de recherche sur la science et la technologie (CIRST). His research focuses on science policy\, scholarly publishing\, and diversity and equity in science. \n  \n\nChris McCutcheon \nChris McCutcheon is a knowledge translation expert who specializes in IKT and health services and policy research. He is currently the manager of the Integrated Knowledge Translation Research Network at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. For close to a decade he designed and managed applied research programs for the Canadian Health Services Research Foundation and authored several of their dissemination products. From 2007 to 2010 Chris worked for the Knowledge Translation portfolio of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). While at CIHR\, Chris managed IKT research programs\, such as Partnerships for Health System Improvement and the Knowledge Synthesis grants. He also designed and piloted Evidence on Tap\, CIHR’s first research program designed to produce rapid and relevant research for health-system decision makers. Chris holds a master’s degree in Social and Political Thought from York University. He is co-editor of Research Coproduction in Health Care\, forthcoming from Wiley. \n  \n \nDr. David Moher \nDr. David Moher is a senior scientist\, clinical epidemiology program\, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute\, where he directs the centre for journalology (publication science) (http://www.ohri.ca/journalology/ ). Dr. Moher is also a full Professor\, School of Epidemiology and Public Health\, Faculty of Medicine\, University of Ottawa\, where he holds a University Research Chair. Dr. Moher is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. Dr. Moher holds an MSc in epidemiology and PhD in clinical epidemiology and biostatistics. The current focus of Dr. Moher’s research is open science. \n  \n \nDr. Kirsten Patrick \nDr. Patrick obtained her medical degree and an anaesthesiology qualification in South Africa. She also holds a MSc in Global Health Policy from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK. She has worked as a medical editor for 15 years\, first at The BMJ and then at CMAJ\, where she was recently appointed Editor-in-Chief. \n  \n  \nDr. Justin Presseau \nDr. Presseau is a Scientist at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute\, and Associate Professor in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health and School of Psychology at the University of Ottawa. He is also Chair of the Canadian Psychological Association’s Health Psychology and Behavioural Medicine section. Dr. Presseau has been awarded early career awards from the UK Society for Behavioural Medicine\, the International Society of Behavioral Medicine\, and the European Health Psychology Society\, a mid-career award from the Canadian Psychological Association\, and is an Associate Editor for Implementation Science. Dr. Presseau’s research program operates at the intersection between health psychology and implementation science\, drawing upon behaviour change theories and methods to design and evaluate theory-based strategies for promoting healthcare professional behaviour change to increase best practice and reduce non-evidenced healthcare. \n  \nDr. Borsika Rabin \nDr. Rabin is an Associate Professor at the UC San Diego Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science\, the Co-Director of the UC San Diego Dissemination and Implementation Science Center (DISC) and the San Diego CFAR Implementation Science Hub\, and an Implementation Science (IS) expert on a number of large NIH and VA Center grants and research projects including the VA San Diego Center of Excellence for Stress and Mental Health and the Quadruple Aim QUERI Program (Denver VA). Dr. Rabin’s research focuses on improving population health outcomes in real-world clinical and public health settings through increasing the equitable reach\, adoption\, implementation\, and sustained use of evidence-based interventions. She does this through the development of models\, methods\, and measures for dissemination and implementation science and their application across diverse topic areas\, populations\, and settings in order to demonstrate their wide utility and broad generalizability. Dr. Rabin also has extensive expertise in developing and implementing novel and diverse capacity building approaches for dissemination and implementation research. \n  \nDr. Dawn Stacey \nDawn Stacey RN PhD FAAN FCAHC FCAN holds a Research Chair in Knowledge Translation to Patients and is a Professor in the School of Nursing at the University of Ottawa. She is a Senior Scientist and Scientific Director of the Patient Decision Aids Research Group at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. She leads the Cochrane Review of Patient Decision Aids\, co-chairs of the Steering Committee for the International Patient Decision Aid Standards Collaboration (IPDAS) and collaborates on the Cochrane Review of Interventions for Increasing the Use of Shared Decision Making. More specifically\, her research program focuses on: a) patient decision aids; b) decision coaching; c) implementation of evidence into practice; d) telephone-based care\, and e) interprofessional approaches to shared decision making. She has >290 peer-reviewed publications and given >160 invited national and international presentations. In 2020\, she won the Nursing Research Excellence Award from the Canadian Association of Schools of nursing and the University of Ottawa Award for Excellence in Research. For more information visit her research websites https://decisionaid.ohri.ca; https://ktcanada.ohri.ca/costars \nDr. Andrea C. Tricco \nDr. Andrea C. Tricco (PhD\, MSc) is a Scientist and Director of the Knowledge Synthesis Team in the Knowledge Translation Program of the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute\, St. Michael’s Hospital. She is an Associate Professor at the University of Toronto in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health & Institute of Health Policy\, Management\, and Evaluation. She is also a Co-Director & Adjunct Associate Professor for the Queen’s Collaboration for Health Care Quality Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) Centre of Excellence at Queen’s University. Dr. Tricco is a knowledge synthesis methodologist with >270 publications in this area\, including papers in high-impact journals (e.g.\, British Medical Journal \, Journal of the American Medical Association\, Lancet). She currently holds a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Knowledge Synthesis. She has been commissioned by several agencies to conduct knowledge synthesis\, such as the World Health Organization and Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-term Care. Her research has been covered by major media outlets\, such as CTV News\, Global News\, and Radio Canada International. She has presented at >190 local\, national\, and international meetings and led >60 reports for decision-making agencies. She is also an Associate Editor for the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology\, and Systematic Reviews; and sits on the Editorial Board for BMC Medicine and JBI Evidence Synthesis. She developed and teaches an online systematic review course that >560 students have completed. \nDr. Holly Witteman \nHolly Witteman\, PhD\, is the Canada Research Chair in Human-Centred Digital Health and a Professor in the Department of Family & Emergency Medicine\, Université Laval\, Quebec City\, Canada. Quebec City is unceded traditional territory of the Huron-Wendat. Dr. Witteman is a scientist in the VITAM Research Centre for Sustainable Health\, the Research Centre of the CHU de Québec-Université Laval\, and an Affiliate Investigator at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute\, Ottawa\, Canada. With an interdisciplinary background in human factors engineering and social sciences\, her research is about how we can achieve human-centredness in health-related domains\, including a focus on how best to adapt digital health technology to people rather than expecting people to adapt to technology. She specializes in human-computer interaction in health education\, risk communication and decision making\, including design methods and system changes to support inclusive user-\, human- and patient-centredness. Her work as Principal Investigator has been funded by the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Santé (FRQS)\, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI\, United States)\, the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)\, the Canadian Immunization Research Network (CIRN)\, Sentinelle Nord\, and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). Registration for the KT Canada Virtual Scientific Meeting will open on Feb. 1\, 2022. \nYou may register here:\nhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/kt-canada-virtual-scientific-meeting-2022-tickets-251323313797 \nThe deadline to register is May 1st\, 2022. \nFees \nRegular: $225 \nStudents & Fellows: $70 \nPatients and Caregivers: Please contact Meghan directly: Meghan.Storey@unityhealth.to \n<!--Registration is now open for the KT Canada Virtual Scientific Meeting.\n\nYou may register here.\n\nThe deadline to register is May 1st\, 2021.\n\n \n\nFees\n\nRegular: $210\n\nStudents & Fellows: $55\n\nPatients and Caregivers: Please contact Meghan directly: Meghan.Storey@unityhealth.to--> SciMtg2022_Agenda_posted_Apr6\n<!--To download the agenda for the 2021 KT Canada Scientific Meeting\, click here.--> KTC program at a glance_Posted\n<!--Please click here to view and download the program at a glance.--> \n Oral Presentations\n\nOral presentation time will be 15 minutes in total\, which includes 5 minutes for Q & A. The presentation recording and PDF of slides will be posted in the online event space. Registered meeting participants will be able to view these leading up to the meeting\, during the meeting dates\, and after the meeting. The abstracts for each project will also be posted in the online meeting space and in the meeting program. \nTechnical info: \n\nPlease send a 10-minute video recording of your presentation\, in MP4 format. \nPlease send a PDF of your slides. \nWe recommend using the Vimeo screen recorder to create your recording. It is free\, it is quite user-friendly and the product has clear audio and visuals. \nIt is your choice if you would like to include the webcam view of you presenting. In general audiences seem to prefer when they can see the presenter but we are giving you the choice. \nIf you have a different preferred software for creating your mp4\, that is fine! That said\, we do not recommend using Zoom to make the recording\, if possible. When a recording is created in Zoom and re-played in Zoom\, the visual quality tends to be diminished. \nPlease make sure text is large and there is strong contrast between text and background. We recommend minimum font size of 24 pt. \nContrast checker here. \nPlease ensure you describe any graphs\, images\, etc.\nBe aware that videos may be laggy. \n\nOral presentations format: we will play the 10-minute recorded presentation for the audience over Zoom. We would like the presenter to be online and available during that time. Once the 10-minute recording has concluded\, there will be approximately 5 minutes of live Q&A. The audience may submit questions using the chat box or the Q&A function. There will be a moderator assigned to the session to read out the questions that come in. The presenter will be able to answer aloud (i.e. not restricted to the chat box). \nPlease send your materials (presentation recording & slides) by Monday\, April 25th.  \nPlease send to: KTCanadaFiles@gmail.com. We recommend using https://wetransfer.com/ to send large files. \n\n Poster Presentations with live Q&A  \n\nThe top-ranked 18 posters will get approximately 5 minutes with the plenary group during a live meeting session. During the 5 minutes\, we will play their 3-minute recording and then they will get up to 2 minutes for Q & A. There will be a moderator. \nThe recording and PDF of the poster will be available to view in the online meeting space before\, during and after the meeting. The abstracts for each project will also be posted in the online meeting space and in the meeting program. \nTechnical info: \n\nPlease send an up-to 3-minute video recording of your presentation\, in MP4 format. In the past\, presenters used 1-3 slides in their recording which help explain the information on the poster. \nPlease send a PDF of your poster. There are no rules about poster dimensions or orientation. \nWe recommend using the Vimeo screen recorder to create your recording. It is free\, it is quite user-friendly and the product has clear audio and visuals. Screencastify also works well and is free for videos < 5 minutes long. \nIt is your choice if you would like to include the webcam view of you presenting. In general audiences seem to prefer when they can see the presenter but we are giving you the choice. \nIf you have a different preferred software for creating your mp4\, that is fine! That said\, we do not recommend using Zoom to make the recording\, if possible. When a recording is created in Zoom and re-played in Zoom\, the visual quality tends to be diminished. \nPlease make sure text is large and there is strong contrast between text and background. We recommend minimum font size of 24 pt. \nContrast checker here. \nPlease ensure you describe any graphs\, images\, etc.\nBe aware that videos may be laggy. \n\nPlease send your materials (presentation recording & slides) byMonday\, April 25th.  \nPlease send to: KTCanadaFiles@gmail.com. We recommend using https://wetransfer.com/ to send large files. \n\n Poster Presentations without live Q&A \n\nFor the posters that were not ranked in the top 18\, the recording and PDF of the poster will be available to view in the online meeting space before\, during and after the meeting and attendees will be encouraged to visit them and to contact presenters when interested in their work. The abstract will also be posted in the online meeting space and in the meeting program. \nTechnical info: \n\nPlease send an up-to 3-minute video recording of your presentation\, in MP4 format. In the past\, presenters used 1-3 slides in their recording which help explain the information on the poster. \nPlease send a PDF of your poster. There are no rules about poster dimensions or orientation.\nWe recommend using the Vimeo screen recorder to create your recording. It is free\, it is quite user-friendly and the product has clear audio and visuals. Screencastify also works well and is free for videos < 5 minutes long. \nIt is your choice if you would like to include the webcam view of you presenting. In general audiences seem to prefer when they can see the presenter but we are giving you the choice. \nIf you have a different preferred software for creating your mp4\, that is fine! That said\, we do not recommend using Zoom to make the recording\, if possible. When a recording is created in Zoom and re-played in Zoom\, the visual quality tends to be diminished. \nPlease make sure text is large and there is strong contrast between text and background. We recommend minimum font size of 24 pt. \nContrast checker here. \nPlease ensure you describe any graphs\, images\, etc.\nBe aware that videos may be laggy. \n\nPlease send your materials (presentation recording & slides) by Monday\, April 25th.  \nPlease send to: KTCanadaFiles@gmail.com. We recommend using https://wetransfer.com/ to send large files. \n<!--Please click here to view and download the program at a glance.--> \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-scientific-meeting-2022/
CATEGORIES:future events,Scientific Meeting
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ktcanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/KTcanada_logo_retina.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210505
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210508
DTSTAMP:20260605T151916
CREATED:20210108T160101Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210420T021351Z
UID:5364-1620172800-1620431999@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Scientific Meeting 2021
DESCRIPTION:Conference InformationGuest SpeakersRegistrationAgendaProgramThe 2021 KT Canada Annual Scientific Meeting is being held on May 5th-7th in a virtual format. \n  \nThe theme is ‘Developing and evaluating KT interventions in a complex health system’. \n  \nPlease note that we are not accepting new abstracts for the 2021 Scientific Meeting. \n  \nRegistrants of the KT Canada virtual Scientific Meeting have the opportunity to request a one-on-one\, 20-minute meeting (call or zoom) with a KT expert to discuss a specific question or topic related to their work and research. \nSpaces are limited and we will do our best to set up a meeting for you with the expert of your choice (although we cannot guarantee it).  \nThe online request form will be shared with registrants on Monday\, April 19th at 12:00pm EST. It is beneficial to complete your request form sooner than later in order improve your chance of meeting with your top choice. The request form will be closed at 11:59pm EST on April 27th.  \n  \nWe will be posting additional information as it becomes available. For questions please contact Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to. Samantha Bellefeuille \nIn 2019\, Samantha completed the Family Engagement in Research Certificate at McMaster University and ever since has been involved in research as a family partner. During the course\, she completed infographics\, presentations\, research projects and more. Samantha was asked to join the SIBYAC group (Sibling Youth Advisory Council)\, where she attended conferences\, spoke on panels\, helped with research and learned a lot more about the research perspective while sharing her perspective as a Sibling/Family Partner from her experiences with her brother. Her younger brother\, who is seventeen\, has a rare form of epilepsy called CDKL5. Being a large part of his caregiving as well as attending multiple appointments gave her a lot of insight into a new side of pediatric care and especially the transition from pediatrics to adult healthcare.  In 2020\, Samantha joined the CHEO Partner in Research program where she helps out as a Family Leader providing feedback on a variety of research projects. In September 2020\, she joined the CAMI Chatbot project from the University of Alberta where she had to research valuable resources in her area to be used within the Chatbot Project. \n  \nDr. Nicole Etherington \nNicole Etherington is a Senior Research Associate in the Clinical Epidemiology Program at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI). Dr. Etherington completed her PhD in sociology at the University of Western Ontario in 2016\, with a focus on gender and health. Dr. Etherington’s current research applies a social lens to clinical practice issues\, focusing primarily on the multi-level factors shaping teamwork\, provider occupational well-being\, and patient outcomes in acute care. \n  \nProfessor Nicolas Fernandez \nNicolas Fernandez is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Medicine at the Université de Montreal.  Recipient of a transplanted kidney in 2008\, Nicolas learned to manage his dialysis treatments\, both peritoneal and hemodialysis\, over a period of eight years.  This life transforming experience\, combined with his academic career in educational research and teaching\, allowed Nicolas to develop unique insights into self-management of chronic illness.  His doctoral thesis was completed in large part during treatment sessions in the dialysis unit of his local hospital.  Nicolas contributes regularly to initiatives aimed at integrating patient perspective into training of health professionals\, health research and Quality Improvement in clinical settings. \n  \nJenny Leese \nJenny Leese is a PhD candidate in Rehabilitation Sciences at the University of British Columbia and a research trainee at Arthritis Research Canada. Her qualitative research in patient-oriented knowledge translation uses an ethics lens to develop e-health interventions with persons living with arthritis. Her work is supported by a Canadian Institutes for Research Doctoral Research Award. \n  \n  \n  \nDr. France Légaré \nFirst trained as an architect\, France Légaré practices family medicine in Quebec since 1990 and is a full professor in the Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine Department at Université Laval\, Quebec. She is an internationally recognized leader in Shared Decision-Making (SDM) and Knowledge Translation research. In 2005\, she obtained her PhD in Population Health from the University of Ottawa under the supervision of Dr. Annette O’Connor. The same year\, she was awarded a grant as a clinical investigator by the Fonds de la recherche en santé du Québec (FRSQ) for her research program entitled “Health professionals in primary care: From knowledge brokers to decision brokers.” From June 2006 to May 2016\, Dr. Légaré held the title of Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Shared Decision Making and Knowledge Translation. As of June 1st 2016\, she holds the title of Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Shared Decision Making and Knowledge Translation. She was also the Canadian Cochrane Network Site representative at Université Laval (the CHU de Québec Research Centre) from 1999 to 2013 and\, from 2013-15\, its inaugural scientific director. She now acts as its scientific co-director. Dre Légaré is nominated PI/co-PI on 35 grants (˃$16 M) and Co-I on 53 (˃$49 M) for a total of ˃$65 M in the past 7 years. She has published more than 350 papers with 327 PubMed indexed; her H index is 67 and she has ˃22 500 citations (Google Scholar). In both 2017 and2018\, she was listed as one of the top 1% most cited scientists (Clarivate Analytics https://hcr.clarivate.com/) indicating that her work has been repeatedly judged by her peers to be of notable significance and utility. Her research program aims at implementing shared decision making in clinical practices with a focus on home care. \n  \nClaire Ludwig \nClaire Ludwig is a PhD candidate at the School of Nursing\, University of Ottawa.  Her doctoral work is focused on patient engagement in research\, specifically engaging frail and/or seriously ill patients as knowledge users.  Her other research interests examine how patients and nurses negotiate the process of triage and self-management in cancer symptom management.  Claire is a senior health care leader involved in the development\, implementation and evaluation of large-scale programs aimed at improving patient and caregiver outcomes.  Claire is also a patient with a cancer\, currently in remission.  She has served as a knowledge user on research projects as a healthcare administrator and as a patient advisor in the acute treatment and maintenance phases of her illness. \n  \nDr. Carl May \nCarl May is Professor of Medical Sociology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.  Carl’s research focuses on developing a richer understanding of the development and implementation of innovative healthcare technologies and other complex healthcare interventions.  His contributions to this field include ethnographic and other qualitative studies of professional practice and health technologies in use\, along with leadership of the development of Normalization Process Theory and Burden of Treatment Theory.  These models are widely used to help understand the implementation of new technologies and ways of working in healthcare\, and their impacts on patients\, caregivers and professionals. \n  \nDr. Ruth Ndjaboue \nRuth Ndjaboue completed her Masters in Psychology (2006\, Cameroon) and Public health (2007\, Belgium) and a PhD in Epidemiology (2016\, Université Laval).  She is currently completing a postdoctoral fellowship in Knowledge Translation (2017-present\, Université Laval and University of Toronto)\, funded by Diabetes Action Canada and the International Society of Medical Decision Making.  Her work has contributed to knowledge advancement of the psychosocial factors\, chronic diseases\, medical education\, gender and social inequalities.  Her interdisciplinary methodological expertise includes quantitative and qualitative methods and human-computer interaction.  She focuses on developing innovative strategies to facilitate patient engagement and the use of information technology in healthcare research and education. \n  \nDr. Michael Strong \nMichael J. Strong became the President of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research in October\, 2018. Prior to this\, he served as the Dean of the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University where he continues to hold an appointment as a Distinguished University Professor and a Scientist at the Robarts Research Institute. He undertook his medical training at Queens University in Kingston (1976 – 1982)\, neurology training at Western University (1982 – 1987)\, and postgraduate training at the Laboratory of Central Nervous System Studies (director – D. Carleton Gadjusek\, Nobel Laureate) at the National Institutes of Health\, Bethesda\, Maryland under the supervision of Ralph M. Garruto\, PhD (1987 – 1990). He has published over 195 peer-reviewed articles and 29 chapters\, edited 4 textbooks and given over 170 invited lectures nationally and internationally related to his research in ALS. Dr. Strong was awarded the Sheila Essay Award in 2005 and the Forbes Norris Award in 2008\, and is the only Canadian to have received both international awards for ALS research. He was elected as a fellow of the American Academy of Neurology in 2008. In 2009\, he was elected a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. His research has focused on understanding the cellular biology of ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease) including the role of altered RNA metabolism in the genesis of neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions and in the clinicopathological correlates of the frontotemporal spectrum disorder that can be associated with ALS. The latter has led to an appreciation for the role of alterations in tau protein metabolism in ALS. \n  \nDr. Elisabeth Vesnaver \nElisabeth Vesnaver is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa. She is a social scientist interested in social determinants of health and health-related behaviour. She completed a PhD in Family Relations and Applied Human Nutrition at the University of Guelph with a focus on gender\, age\, and food-related behaviours. Her current work focuses on using participatory research approaches to develop interventions to support plasma donation behaviour among men who have sex with men in a context of ongoing exclusionary policies. Registration is now open for the KT Canada Virtual Scientific Meeting. \nYou may register here. \nThe deadline to register is May 1st\, 2021. \n  \nFees \nRegular: $210 \nStudents & Fellows: $55 \nPatients and Caregivers: Please contact Meghan directly: Meghan.Storey@unityhealth.to To download the agenda for the 2021 KT Canada Scientific Meeting\, click here. Please click here to view and download the program at a glance. \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-scientific-meeting-2021/
CATEGORIES:future events,Scientific Meeting
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ktcanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/KTcanada_logo_retina.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200506
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200508
DTSTAMP:20260605T151916
CREATED:20191010T150231Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210108T185037Z
UID:5043-1588723200-1588895999@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Scientific Meeting 2020
DESCRIPTION:  \nGiven the evolving COVID-19 situation and in an abundance of caution\, we have made the difficult decision to cancel this event. In place of the in-person meeting\, we are currently exploring other ways we can connect by means of webinars\, and potentially postponing to a later date. We will share more details on our plans in the coming weeks.\n  \n \n  \n  \nConference InformationGuest SpeakersRegistration & Hotel BookingSubmit an abstractAgendaProgramSponsorsGiven the evolving COVID-19 situation and in an abundance of caution\, we have made the difficult decision to cancel this event. In place of the in-person meeting\, we are currently exploring other ways we can connect by means of webinars\, and potentially postponing to a later date. We will share more details on our plans in the coming weeks. \nThe 2020 KT Canada Annual Scientific Meeting is being held on May 7th & 8th in Ottawa\, ON at the Delta Hotel\, 101 Lyon Street. \nThe theme is ‘Developing KT interventions in a complex health system’. \nWe will be posting additional information as it becomes available. For questions please contact Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to. \nClaire Ludwig \nClaire Ludwig is a PhD candidate at the School of Nursing\, University of Ottawa.  Her doctoral work is focused on patient engagement in research\, specifically engaging frail and/or seriously ill patients as knowledge users.  Her other research interests examine how patients and nurses negotiate the process of triage and self-management in cancer symptom management.  Claire is a senior health care leader involved in the development\, implementation and evaluation of large-scale programs aimed at improving patient and caregiver outcomes.  Claire is also a patient with a cancer\, currently in remission.  She has served as a knowledge user on research projects as a healthcare administrator and as a patient advisor in the acute treatment and maintenance phases of her illness. \n  \nDr. Carl May \nCarl May is Professor of Medical Sociology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.  Carl’s research focuses on developing a richer understanding of the development and implementation of innovative healthcare technologies and other complex healthcare interventions.  His contributions to this field include ethnographic and other qualitative studies of professional practice and health technologies in use\, along with leadership of the development of Normalization Process Theory and Burden of Treatment Theory.  These models are widely used to help understand the implementation of new technologies and ways of working in healthcare\, and their impacts on patients\, caregivers and professionals. \n  \nDr. France Légaré \nFirst trained as an architect\, France Légaré practices family medicine in Quebec since 1990 and is a full professor in the Family Medicine and Emergency Medicine Department at Université Laval\, Quebec. She is an internationally recognized leader in Shared Decision-Making (SDM) and Knowledge Translation research. In 2005\, she obtained her PhD in Population Health from the University of Ottawa under the supervision of Dr. Annette O’Connor. The same year\, she was awarded a grant as a clinical investigator by the Fonds de la recherche en santé du Québec (FRSQ) for her research program entitled “Health professionals in primary care: From knowledge brokers to decision brokers.” From June 2006 to May 2016\, Dr. Légaré held the title of Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Shared Decision Making and Knowledge Translation. As of June 1st 2016\, she holds the title of Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Shared Decision Making and Knowledge Translation. She was also the Canadian Cochrane Network Site representative at Université Laval (the CHU de Québec Research Centre) from 1999 to 2013 and\, from 2013-15\, its inaugural scientific director. She now acts as its scientific co-director. Dre Légaré is nominated PI/co-PI on 35 grants (˃$16 M) and Co-I on 53 (˃$49 M) for a total of ˃$65 M in the past 7 years. She has published more than 350 papers with 327 PubMed indexed; her H index is 67 and she has ˃22 500 citations (Google Scholar). In both 2017 and2018\, she was listed as one of the top 1% most cited scientists (Clarivate Analytics https://hcr.clarivate.com/ ) indicating that her work has been repeatedly judged by her peers to be of notable significance and utility. Her research program aims at implementing shared decision making in clinical practices with a focus on home care. \n  \nDr. Justin Presseau \nDr. Presseau is a Scientist at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute\, and Assistant Professor in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health and School of Psychology at the University of Ottawa. He is also Chair of the Canadian Psychological Association’s Health Psychology and Behavioural Medicine section. Dr. Presseau has been awarded early career awards from the UK Society for Behavioural Medicine\, the International Society of Behavioral Medicine\, and the European Health Psychology Society\, a mid-career award from the Canadian Psychological Association\, and is an Associate Editor for Implementation Science and Applied Psychology: Health and Well-Being. Dr. Presseau’s research program operates at the intersection between health psychology and implementation science\, drawing upon behaviour change theories and methods to design and evaluate theory-based strategies for promoting healthcare professional behaviour change to increase best practice and reduce non-evidenced healthcare. \n  \nJenny Leese \nJenny Leese is a PhD candidate in Rehabilitation Sciences at the University of British Columbia and a research trainee at Arthritis Research Canada. Her qualitative research in patient-oriented knowledge translation uses an ethics lens to develop e-health interventions with persons living with arthritis. Her work is supported by a Canadian Institutes for Research Doctoral Research Award. \n  \n  \nDr. Michael Strong \nDr. Michael J. Strong became the President of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research in October\, 2018. Prior to this\, he served as the Dean of the Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry at Western University where he continues to hold an appointment as a Distinguished University Professor and a Scientist at the Robarts Research Institute. He undertook his medical training at Queens University in Kingston (1976 – 1982)\, neurology training at Western University (1982 – 1987)\, and postgraduate training at the Laboratory of Central Nervous System Studies (director – D. Carleton Gadjusek\, Nobel Laureate) at the National Institutes of Health\, Bethesda\, Maryland under the supervision of Ralph M. Garruto\, PhD (1987 – 1990). \nHe has published over 195 peer-reviewed articles and 29 chapters\, edited 4 textbooks and given over 170 invited lectures nationally and internationally related to his research in ALS. Dr. Strong was awarded the Sheila Essay Award in 2005 and the Forbes Norris Award in 2008\, and is the only Canadian to have received both international awards for ALS research. He was elected as a fellow of the American Academy of Neurology in 2008. In 2009\, he was elected a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. \nHis research has focused on understanding the cellular biology of ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease) including the role of altered RNA metabolism in the genesis of neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions and in the clinicopathological correlates of the frontotemporal spectrum disorder that can be associated with ALS. The latter has led to an appreciation for the role of alterations in tau protein metabolism in ALS. \n  \nProfessor Nicolas Fernandez \nNicolas Fernandez is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Medicine at the Université de Montreal.  Recipient of a transplanted kidney in 2008\, Nicolas learned to manage his dialysis treatments\, both peritoneal and hemodialysis\, over a period of eight years.  This life transforming experience\, combined with his academic career in educational research and teaching\, allowed Nicolas to develop unique insights into self-management of chronic illness.  His doctoral thesis was completed in large part during treatment sessions in the dialysis unit of his local hospital.  Nicolas contributes regularly to initiatives aimed at integrating patient perspective into training of health professionals\, health research and Quality Improvement in clinical settings. \n  \nDr. Nicole Etherington \nNicole Etherington is a Senior Research Associate in the Clinical Epidemiology Program at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI). Dr. Etherington completed her PhD in sociology at the University of Western Ontario in 2016\, with a focus on gender and health. Dr. Etherington’s current research applies a social lens to clinical practice issues\, focusing primarily on the multi-level factors shaping teamwork\, provider occupational well-being\, and patient outcomes in acute care. \n  \nDr. Ruth Ndjaboue \nRuth Ndjaboue completed her Masters in Psychology (2006\, Cameroon) and Public health (2007\, Belgium) and a PhD in Epidemiology (2016\, Université Laval).  She is currently completing a postdoctoral fellowship in Knowledge Translation (2017-present\, Université Laval and University of Toronto)\, funded by Diabetes Action Canada and the International Society of Medical Decision Making.  Her work has contributed to knowledge advancement of the psychosocial factors\, chronic diseases\, medical education\, gender and social inequalities.  Her interdisciplinary methodological expertise includes quantitative and qualitative methods and human-computer interaction.  She focuses on developing innovative strategies to facilitate patient engagement and the use of information technology in healthcare research and education.   \nRegistration is now open for the 2020 KT Canada Scientific Meeting! \n  \nFees \nRegular: $675 \nStudents & Fellows: $365 \nPatients and Caregivers: Please contact Meghan directly: Meghan.Storey@unityhealth.to \nThe deadline to register is April 30th\, 2020. \nRegister here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/kt-canada-scientific-meeting-2020-tickets-87812801453 \n  \nVenue/ Hotel Information \nYou may book a room at the Delta Hotel by using this link. \nPlease note that you must use the above link in order to get the conference room rate. \nYou must book your room before 4:00pm EST\, Sunday\, April 5th in order to receive the conference room rate. \nThe KT Canada Scientific Meeting is being held at the Delta Hotel at 101 Lyon St. in Ottawa on the 7-8th of May 2020. \nHotel website: Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre \nHotel Address: 101 Lyon Street North\, Ottawa\, Ontario K1R 5T9 \nPhone: +1 613-237-3600 \n  \n“Enjoy a luxurious stay within walking distance of many city centre attractions at Delta Hotels Ottawa City Centre. Ideally located in downtown Ottawa\, Ontario\, our modern\, stylish hotel offers sleek\, spacious hotel rooms and suites featuring pillow-top bedding\, floor-to-ceiling windows and scenic city views. Enjoy complimentary Wi-Fi throughout our hotel. Dine at our Italian inspired bar and kitchen\, Prova\, our signature hotel restaurant. Maintain your fitness routine in our state-of-the-art gym\, relax on our rooftop terrace or take a dip in our indoor\, oversized saltwater pool. Those who are in downtown Ottawa\, Ontario to host a meeting or social occasion will appreciate our complementary business center and flexible event venues that can accommodate up to 1\,100 guests. Explore Ottawa city centre with ease – Shaw Convention Centre\, the ByWard Market District\, Rideau Canal and Parliament Hill are moments away. We can’t wait for you to visit us at our hotel in downtown Ottawa\, Ontario.” \n  \nAccessibility \nFor more information about the physical features of our accessible rooms\, common areas\, or special services relating to a specific disability\, please call +1 613-237-3600. \n  \nAccessible Areas with Accessible Routes from Public Entrance \nBusiness Center \nFitness Center \nMeeting spaces and ballrooms \nPublic entrance alternative \nRegistration Desk Pathway \nRegistration desk \nRestaurant(s)/Lounge(s) \n  \nAccessible Hotel Features \nAccessible Self-parking \nSelf-parking facility\, van-accessible spaces \nSelf-parking\, accessible spaces \nService animals are welcome \nValet parking for vehicles outfitted for drivers in wheelchairs \nElevators \n  \nGuest Room Accessibility \nAccessible guest rooms with 32” wide doorways \nAccessible route from public entrance to accessible guest rooms \nBathroom grab bars \nBathtub grab bars \nBathtub seat \nDeadbolt locks\, lowered \nDoors with lever handles \nElectrical outlets\, lowered \nHearing accessible rooms and/or kits \nRoll-in shower \nShower wand\, adjustable \nTTY/TTD available \nTV with close-captioning \nToilet seat at wheelchair height \nTransfer shower \nVanities\, accessible \nViewports\, lowered \n  \nParking \nOn-site parking\, fee: 6 CAD hourly\, 25 CAD daily \nValet parking\, fee: 35 CAD daily \nOnsite Garage clearance is 6 feet. Contact the hotel for larger vehicle options. Abstract submission is now closed. To download the agenda for the 2020 KT Canada Scientific Meeting\, click here. Coming soon… Coming soon… \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-scientific-meeting-2020/
CATEGORIES:Scientific Meeting
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ktcanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/iStock-171222566.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20170615
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20170617
DTSTAMP:20260605T151916
CREATED:20191106T182938Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191106T185304Z
UID:5082-1497484800-1497657599@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Scientific Meeting 2017
DESCRIPTION:Conference InformationAbstract SubmissionAgendaProgram\nKT in primary care – June 15 and 16\, 2017\nJoin us in Quebec City on June 15 and 16\, 2017. We invite you to join the discussion on KT IN PRIMARY CARE through attendance at the KT Canada Annual Scientific Meeting \n  \n  \n\nHighlights:\nGuest Speakers Includes: \n \nRobbie Foy: “Implementation Research in Primary Care” \nDr. Foy is Professor of Primary Care at the Leeds Institute of Health Sciences and a general practitioner in inner-city Leeds.  His field of work\, implementation research\, aims to inform policy decisions about how best to use resources to improve the uptake of research findings by evaluating approaches to change professional and organisational behaviour.  His former posts include a clinical senior lectureship at Newcastle University\, and an MRC training fellowship in health services research based jointly between the Universities of Edinburgh and Aberdeen.  He also admits to being a trained public health physician.  He was a 2006-7 Harkness / Health Foundation Fellow in Health Care Policy\, based jointly between the Veteran’s Administration and RAND in Los Angeles.  He was Deputy Editor-in-Chief of the open access journal\, Implementation Science\, until 2015. \n  \n  \n \nProfessor Michael Kidd: “Lessons from around the world on Knowledge Translation in Primary Care” \nDr. Kidd is a family doctor\, primary care researcher and medical educator.  He served as president of the World Organization of Family Doctors from 2013-2016\, and as president of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners from 2002-2006.  He is currently Professor of Global Primary Care at Flinders University based in Adelaide in Australia.  In May 2017 he will take up the position of Chair of the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Toronto. Michael has wide-ranging research and education interests in global health\, primary care\, digital health\, health policy\, the education of health professionals\, safety and quality in primary care\, the primary care management of HIV\, viral hepatitis and sexually transmissible infections\, and the role of case reports in contemporary health care. In the Queen’s Birthday Honours List in 2009 he was made a Member of the Order of Australia for service to medicine and education in the areas of general practice and primary health care. \n  \nDr. Sabrina Wong: “Engaging Practices in Improving the Science and Reporting of Performance in Primary Care” \nDr. Wong is a Registered Nurse and health services researcher located at the University of British Columbia Centre for Health Services and Policy Research and School of Nursing Dr. Wong’s research focuses on primary health care\, specifically how structures (e.g.\, models of care) and processes (e.g.\, interprofessional teamwork\, interpersonal communication) can enhance the delivery and organization of health services. She is a recognized leader in research involving patient-reported quality of care\, her work contributes to informing practice and system level interventions that seek to decrease health inequities among Canadian residents\, including people who face multiple disadvantages in accessing and using the health care system such as those who have language barriers and live in poverty. Her current major research projects include overall leadership and responsibility for the community based primary health care innovation team grant\, “Transforming Primary Health Care Through Performance Measurement and Reporting; chairing the Indicator Working Group across the 12 primary health care innovation teams\, working on setting up the British Columbia Primary and Integrated Health Care Innovation Network\, and the growth and sustainability of the pan-Canadian CPCSSN. \n  \nPanel discussions:\nSPOR in primary care \nPractice-Based Research Networks (PBRNs) \n  \nAbstract submission deadline: March 19\, 2017 11:59 PM ET\nPlease submit your abstracts here.   \nPlease note that this is a draft agenda which we will be continually updating.   \nWe are currently working on posting the program\, please check back shortly.\n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-scientific-meeting-2017/
LOCATION:Quebec City\, Quebec\, Quebec City\, QC\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Scientific Meeting
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR