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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220616
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220722
DTSTAMP:20260606T001048
CREATED:20211116T164241Z
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UID:5572-1655337600-1658447999@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Summer Institute 2022
DESCRIPTION:2022 KT Canada Summer Institute\n InformationSpeakersApplyAgendaSponsorsWe are pleased to announce the Knowledge Translation (KT) Canada Virtual Summer Institute\, to be held online in Summer 2022. \nPlease note that the virtual Summer Institute will take place during weekly sessions – Thursday afternoons (Eastern Time)\, from June 16 – July 21\, 2022. \nThe purpose of this Summer Institute is to provide participants with the opportunity to increase their understanding of knowledge translation research as well as opportunities and challenges in this field. The Summer Institute will provide participants with the change to network with colleagues including national KT experts. \nThe theme of the 2022 Institute is: ‘Opportunities to advance KT science’. \nThe Summer Institute is aimed at graduate students\, post-doctoral and clinical fellows\, and junior faculty who study issues relevant to KT and those who want to learn more about how to advance their research skills in this area. \n  \nRegistration Cost – please note that these figures are subject to change. We do not expect them to increase but they may decrease. \nCost for trainees: $175 \nCost for non-trainees (junior faculty\, research staff): $300 \n Additional speakers TBD. Confirmed speakers to date: \n \nDr. Melissa Brouwers \nDr. Melissa Brouwers is the Director of the School of Epidemiology and Public Health (SEPH) at the Faculty of Medicine\, University of Ottawa. Prior to joining the University of Ottawa\, Dr. Brouwers was a Professor in the Departments of Oncology (primary) and Health Research Methodology\, Evidence and Impact (affiliate) at McMaster University where she also served as the Director of the Program in Evidence-based Care\, the guidelines program for Cancer Care Ontario; the Director of the Centre for Evidence-based Implementation at Hamilton Health Sciences; and the Deputy Director of the Escarpment Cancer Research Institute. Dr. Brouwers holds a wealth of experience as a health services researcher with special interest in knowledge translation\, implementation science and evaluation. Furthermore\, she has a passion for graduate school education and international research collaborations. She obtained her PhD in Social Psychology from Western University. \nDr. Janet Curran \nDr. Janet Curran\, Quality and Patient Safety Applied Research Chair (IWK Health\, Nova Scotia Health)\, is a Professor in the School of Nursing at Dalhousie University\, Co-Principal Investigator at the SPOR Evidence Alliance and Co-Director of the JBI Centre of Excellence at Dalhousie University. Dr. Curran works with patients\, families\, and healthcare providers to co-design interventions to improve health outcomes and health system change. \n  \nDr. Khaled El Emam \nDr. Khaled El Emam is the Canada Research Chair (Tier 1) in Medical AI at the University of Ottawa\, where he is a Professor in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health. He is also a Senior Scientist at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute and Director of the multi-disciplinary Electronic Health Information Laboratory\, conducting research on privacy enhancing technologies to enable the sharing of health data for secondary purposes\, including synthetic data generation and de-identification methods. Khaled is co-founder and CEO of Replica Analytics\, a company that develops synthetic data generation technology\, which was recently acquired by Aetion. As an entrepreneur\, Khaled founded or co-founded six product and services companies involved with data management and data analytics\, with some having successful exits. Prior to his academic roles\, he was a Senior Research Officer at the National Research Council of Canada. He also served as the head of the Quantitative Methods Group at the Fraunhofer Institute in Kaiserslautern\, Germany.In 2003 and 2004\, he was ranked as the top systems and software engineering scholar worldwide by the Journal of Systems and Software based on his research on measurement and quality evaluation and improvement. He held the Canada Research Chair in Electronic Health Information at the University of Ottawa from 2005 to 2015. Khaled has a PhD from the Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering\, King’s College\, at the University of London\, England. \n  \nDr. Marie-Pierre Gagnon \nMarie-Pierre Gagnon\, PhD\, is Full Professor at the Faculty of Nursing at Laval University and scientist at the VITAM Research Center in Sustainable Health\, and the Quebec University Hospital Centre. She holds the Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Technologies and Practices in Health. Her research program focuses on the evaluation of digital health technologies\, the organisational\, professional and individual determinants of digital health adoption and integration in the healthcare system\, patient and public involvement in healthcare decisions\, systematic reviews and best practices in knowledge translation and application. \n  \nDr. Clayon Hamilton \nDr. Hamilton worked as the Regional Practice Lead in Research and Knowledge Translation (Long-Term Care) at Fraser Health Authority where he used research and partnerships to integrate evidence into practice to improve the quality of care\, life\, and work-life in the long-term care sector. A trained health services researcher\, he completed a 2-year Health System Impact Fellowship supporting evaluation and system improvement as an embedded scholar at the BC Ministry of Health. He undertook postdoctoral training in knowledge translation and in health services at the University of British Columbia funded by CIHR and Michael Smith Health Research BC. His research has contributed to advancing the practice and evaluation of meaningful patient and family caregiver engagement in research and in health system decision-making. Dr. Hamilton holds a PhD in Health and Rehabilitation Sciences (Measurement and Methods) from Western University and a MSc from the same program. During his graduate and post-graduate training\, he received several research awards and published in respected journals. Passionate about meaningful partnerships\, Dr. Hamilton continues to lead and collaborate on projects to advance patient and family engagement in research\, as well as more broadly in health system decision-making. \nDr. Janet Jull \nDr. Janet Jull is a settler-scholar with a Ph.D. in Population Health from the University of Ottawa. Dr. Jull develops and evaluates shared decision making tools and approaches to support client-centred care with a particular focus on health care systems. Much of Janet’s work is done in partnerships with urban Indigenous\, Inuit\, First Nations\, and Métis communities.\nDr. Jull also investigates how research is conducted in partnerships\, specifically when those who are engaged in the production of research\, partner with those who contend with the real-world needs and constraints of health systems. Dr. Jull’s work is focused on ensuring that research contributes knowledge that can be translated into more equitable and strengthened health systems. Dr. Jull co-leads the SPOR Evidence Alliance Indigenous Peoples Working Group (IPWG)\, whose mission is to ensure all knowledge synthesis and related activities promote Indigenous sovereignty and self-determination and are respectful and inclusive of Indigenous knowledges and ways of knowing\, being\, and doing.\n \nDr. Bryn Lander \nDr. Lander works in the Testing Secretariat in the COVID-19 Taskforce at Health Canada. Within this role she has helped to identify knowledge gaps in COVID-19 testing\, screening and surveillance and liaised with clinicians and researchers across Canada in the development of research proposals to address these gaps. Dr. Lander also supported the development of a variety of COVID-19 testing policy and guidance documents for the government and the general public and organizes weekly meetings with the provinces and territories to share knowledge on testing\, contact tracing and data. Dr. Lander holds a PhD from the University of British Columbia and conducted two implementation science evaluations for her post doctoral research in Vancouver. The first was an integrated knowledge translation project assessing the implementation of new clinician ordering processes in two hospitals. The second compared evaluation of a gynecological practice change between British Columbia and Ontario. \nDr. Anne Sales \nAnne Sales is a nurse and Professor in the Sinclair School of Nursing and the Department of Family and Community Medicine in the School of Medicine at the University of Missouri (Columbia). She is also a Research Scientist at the Center for Clinical Management Research at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System. Her training is in sociology\, health economics\, econometrics\, and general health services research.  Her work involves theory-based design of implementation interventions\, including: understanding how feedback reports affect provider behavior and through behavior change have an impact on patient outcomes; the role of social networks in implementation interventions; and effective implementation methods using electronic health records and digital interventions. She has completed over 40 funded research projects\, many focused on implementation research. She is a founding co-Editor-in-Chief of Implementation Science Communications. \nDr. JD Schwalm \nDr. Schwalm is an Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine\, Division of Cardiology at McMaster University.  He is an Interventional Cardiologist at Hamilton Health Sciences and Niagara Health with clinical interests in both coronary and structural interventions (including Transcatheter Edge-to-Edge Repair).  Dr Schwalm is a Scientist at the Population Health Research Institute and Director of the Centre for Evidence-Based Implementation (CEBI).  His research focus is knowledge translation/implementation sciences as it relates to the field of cardiology at the patient\, physician\, and health system level.  Dr Schwalm has authored over 70 peer-reviewed publications and 4 book chapters.  He has ongoing research collaborations with KT Canada\, the World Health Organization and the World Heart Federation. \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. Amol Verma \nAmol Verma is a physician\, scientist\, and Assistant Professor in General Internal Medicine at St. Michael’s Hospital and the University of Toronto. He is working to study and improve hospital care using electronic clinical data. Amol co-leads GEMINI\, Canada’s largest hospital clinical data analytics network\, which is collecting data from >30 hospitals in Ontario. He is a Provincial Clinical Lead for Quality Improvement in General Internal Medicine with Ontario Health\, a 2020 AMS Healthcare Fellow in Compassion and AI\, and the Vice-Chair of the Researcher Council of the Digital Research Alliance of Canada. Amol completed medical training at the University of Toronto\, a Masters degree at the University of Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar\, and research fellowships through the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada Clinician Investigator Program and the Canadian Frailty Network. Applications are now open for the KT Canada Summer Institute. You can submit your information in either English or French. \nWhat you’ll need for the application: \nJunior faculty & research staff: \n\nName\, email address\, contact address\nInstitution\, role title\, and area of research\nA description of your current research interests and how they relate to knowledge translation and knowledge translation research (500 words)\nAn abstract for a presentation of your research (300 words)\nFor those with results: Background\, Methods\, Results and Discussion/conclusions;\nFor those with research proposals: Background\, Methods\, Planned Analysis\, Expected Outcomes\nCanadian Common CV – Academic (draft version acceptable): https://ccv-cvc.ca/\nNB: International applicants should submit an equivalent CV (one that is used for grant applications)\n\nGraduate students and post-doctoral fellows: \n\nName\, email address\, contact address\nAcademic institution\, program of study\, year of study\nSupervisor’s name and title\nA description of your current research interests and how they relate to knowledge translation and knowledge translation research (500 words)\nA description of your expectations and how the training program would facilitate your career goals (500 words)\nAn abstract for a presentation of your research (300 words)For those with results: Background\, Methods\, Results and Discussion/conclusions;\nFor those with research proposals: Background\, Methods\, Planned Analysis\, Expected Outcomes\nSupport letter from one referee\nCanadian Common CV – Academic (draft version acceptable): https://ccv-cvc.ca/\nNB: International applicants should submit an equivalent CV (one that is used for grant applications)\n\nYou may submit your application here: \nThe deadline to apply has been extended to Sunday\, Feb. 27 2022\, 11:59 PM Eastern time. SI Agenda_Feb 22_Posted\n  Many thanks to our sponsors who help make the Summer Institute possible. \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-summer-institute-2022/
CATEGORIES:future events,Summer Institute
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210624
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210813
DTSTAMP:20260606T001048
CREATED:20210202T061312Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210420T022302Z
UID:5401-1624492800-1628812799@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Summer Institute 2021
DESCRIPTION:2021 KT Canada Summer Institute\n InformationSpeakersApplyAgendaSponsorsWe are pleased to announce the Knowledge Translation (KT) Canada *virtual* Summer Institute\, to be held online in Summer 2021. Please note that the virtual Summer Institute will take place during weekly sessions. These sessions are tentatively booked from June 24 – August 12\, 2021. \n  \nThe purpose of this Summer Institute is to provide participants with the opportunity to increase their understanding of knowledge translation research as well as opportunities and challenges in this field. The Summer Institute will provide participants with the change to network with colleagues including national KT experts. \n  \nThe theme of the 2021 Institute is: ‘Intersectionality and KT’. \n  \nThe Summer Institute is aimed at graduate students\, post-doctoral and clinical fellows\, and junior faculty who study issues relevant to KT and those who want to learn more about how to advance their research skills in this area. \n  \nPlease note that we are not accepting applications for the 2021 Summer Institute. \n  \nCosts: \nTrainee & fellow registration: $150 \nJunior Faculty registration: $200 \n Dr. Stefan Baral\nDr. Stefan Baral (MD\, MPH\, FRCPC\, CCFP) is an Affiliate Scientist with the Knowledge Translation Program and a physician epidemiologist and an Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. Stefan completed his certification in Community Medicine as a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada and Family medicine with the Canadian Council of Family Physicians. Stefan co-directs the Implementation Science concentration of the DrPH at Johns Hopkins and has worked to increase coherence in the methods and metrics of HIV-related implementation research. Through his role as the Director of the Key Populations Program\, Stefan has led HIV and mental health epidemiology and implementation research focused on characterizing the epidemiology of HIV and effective HIV prevention\, treatment\, and care approaches for gay men and other men who have sex with men\, transgender women\, and female sex workers in the US and across Western and Central\, and Southern Africa. \n\nDr. Carrie Bourassa\nDr. Carrie Bourassa\, B.A.\, M.A.\, PhD: Scientific Director of the National Institute of Indigenous Peoples’ Health – Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). Professor\, Community Health & Epidemiology\, College of Medicine\, University of Saskatchewan. She also is Scientific Director\, Institute of Indigenous Peoples’ Health – Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR-IIPH). She is an adjunct in the Faculties of Education and Kinesiology & Health Studies at the University of Regina and is the Nominated Principal Investigator for the Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI) funded Morning Star Lodge established in 2010\, based in Regina\, as well as for the recently CFI-funded Cultural Safety\, Evaluation\, Training and Research lab that will be built by next summer\, hosted at the University of Saskatchewan. Dr. Carrie Bourassa spent over 15 years as a professor of Indigenous health studies in the Department of Indigenous Health\, Education and Social Work at the First Nations University of Canada (FNUniv) in Regina. Through her role as Scientific Director of IIPH\, she leads the advancement of a national health research agenda to improve and promote the health of First Nations\, Inuit and Métis Peoples in Canada. Dr. Bourassa is a member of the College of New Scholars\, Artists and Scientists of the Royal Society of Canada and a public member of the Royal College Council of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. She is also a member of the International Research Advisory Board (IRAB) for the Health Research Council (New Zealand) and a member of the Health Quality Council Board of Saskatchewan. She was also appointed to the National Research Council of Canada Advisory Board (NRC) – Human Health Therapeutics Research Centre Advisory Board in May 2018. In 2012\, Dr. Bourassa won the (Wee-e- chee-hee- way- shin-awn) Wiichihiwayshinawn Foundation Inc. Métis Award in Health and Science. Dr. Bourassa is Métis and belongs to the Riel Métis Council of Regina Inc. (RMCR\, Local #34). \n\nDr. Melissa Brouwers\nDr. Melissa Brouwers is the Director of the School of Epidemiology and Public Health (SEPH) at the Faculty of Medicine\, University of Ottawa. Prior to joining the University of Ottawa\, Dr. Brouwers was a Professor in the Departments of Oncology (primary) and Health Research Methodology\, Evidence and Impact (affiliate) at McMaster University where she also served as the Director of the Program in Evidence-based Care\, the guidelines program for Cancer Care Ontario; the Director of the Centre for Evidence-based Implementation at Hamilton Health Sciences; and the Deputy Director of the Escarpment Cancer Research Institute. Dr. Brouwers holds a wealth of experience as a health services researcher with special interest in knowledge translation\, implementation science and evaluation. Furthermore\, she has a passion for graduate school education and international research collaborations. She obtained her PhD in Social Psychology from Western University. \n\nAmanda Crupi\nAmanda Crupi is the Manager of Knowledge Translation Strategies in the Science Policy Branch of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). In addition to supporting the integration of knowledge translation within science policies and funded research\, Amanda’s team is also responsible for the delivery of CIHR’s flagship knowledge translation program: the Best Brains Exchange. Prior to joining CIHR\, she worked with the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions as a Research and Policy Specialist where she managed two pan-Canadian knowledge networks focused on health services and policy research with a focus on occupational health and safety and pandemic preparedness. Amanda’s interest and excitement for the science and application of knowledge translation grew through her training at Dalhousie University where she obtained a Master’s of Applied Health Services Research. \n\nDr. Maoliosa Donald\nDr. Donald is the Senior Research Associate for the Roy and Vi Baay Chair in Kidney Research at the Cumming School of Medicine\, University of Calgary. She completed her PhD in Health Sciences and has been a Physical Therapist since 1992. Dr. Donald is passionate about interventions that support person-centered care\, and innovations that address the evidence-practice gap for patients with chronic disease. Her current work involves understanding the needs of individuals with chronic kidney disease and investigating optimal strategies for supporting them and their families. She is actively involved in many professional activities including holding memberships with the Mixed Methods International Research Association and the International Institute for Qualitative Methodology\, as well as being a mentor in Graduate Science Education and Community Health Science Mentorship Programs. \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\nOlivia Magwood\nOlivia Magwood is a Research Associate at the C.T. Lamont Primary Care Research Centre of the Bruyère Research Institute\, Ottawa\, Ontario. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Science (University of Ottawa ’16) and a Masters of Public Health (University of Guelph ’18). Her research interests include systematic review methods for disadvantaged populations\, knowledge translation\, evidence-based guidelines\, and multi-stakeholder engagement. Her ongoing research projects include the use of technology to address youth mental health\, implementation of evidence-based guidelines for homeless health\, and approaches to screening and treating mental health conditions among refugees and migrants. Olivia presently volunteers as Editor-in-Chief for the Canadian Public Health Association’s online blog and as a Communications-Chapter Development Liaison for Women in Global Health\, which aims to highlight women’s leadership in global health and advocates for gender equality in global public health. \n\nKarine Morin\nIn early 2019\, Karine Morin joined NSERC as Director\, Policy and Interagency Affairs where she is responsible for the implementation of the Equity\, Diversity and Inclusion initiative. She recently returned to Ottawa after being an Executive Director at Alberta Innovates\, overseeing a number of initiatives related to clinical research and ethics. Previously\, she has served as Genome Canada’s Director of the “GE3LS” program\, overseeing activities related to the ethical\, environmental\, economic\, legal and social aspects of genomics research. Earlier\, she was a Senior Ethics Policy Advisor at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR). She also conducted research on ethical\, legal and social issues related to genomics at the University of Ottawa’s Institute of Science\, Society and Policy. Karine is a graduate of McGill University School of Law; she also completed a Masters in Law at the University of Pennsylvania\, and worked in the US for more than 10 years. She has broad expertise in science policy\, has published widely in bioethics and law\, and has taught as an adjunct at several universities in the US and Canada. \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\nDr. Monica Taljaard\nMonica Taljaard is a Senior Scientist in the Clinical Epidemiology Program at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI) and Associate Professor in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa. She received her PhD degree in Epidemiology and Biostatistics at Western University in London\, Ontario\, Canada\, in 2006. Her main research interests are in the design\, analysis and ethics of cluster randomized trials. As a methodologist with the Ottawa Methods Centre\, she works with clinicians and researchers from a variety of backgrounds in the design and analysis of cluster randomized trials\, standard clinical trials\, and observational studies. She is Deputy Editor of Clinical Trials: Journal of the Society for Clinical Trials. \n\nLouise Zitzelsberger\nIn her career in KT\, Louise has worked to create and implement the foundations for effective knowledge translation in organizations – from synthesis functions through to implementation and evaluation. Her current position is with Health Canada\, on a KT Unit supporting staff and funding recipients to better integrate KT into funding proposals\, work plans\, and performance measurement. Her KT interests include understanding uptake of innovations at the organizational level in healthcare – in particular the processes around how knowledge is acquired\, assimilated and applied.Please note that we did not accept new applicants for the 2021 Summer Institute. The 2020 event was postponed due to COVID-19 and those applicants were rolled over to this year. \n  \nPlease watch for the applications to open\, this Fall\, for the 2022 Summer Institute! \n  The 2021 agenda will be coming soon. \n  Thank you to our generous sponsors:\n \n \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/summer-institute-2021/
CATEGORIES:future events,Summer Institute
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