BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//KT Canada - ECPv6.15.20//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:KT Canada
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: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
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20240310T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20241103T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20250309T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20251102T060000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0500
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:EDT
DTSTART:20260308T070000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0500
TZNAME:EST
DTSTART:20261101T060000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Vancouver
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20240310T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20241103T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20250309T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20251102T090000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0800
TZOFFSETTO:-0700
TZNAME:PDT
DTSTART:20260308T100000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0700
TZOFFSETTO:-0800
TZNAME:PST
DTSTART:20261101T090000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Halifax
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0300
TZNAME:ADT
DTSTART:20230312T060000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0300
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:AST
DTSTART:20231105T050000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0300
TZNAME:ADT
DTSTART:20240310T060000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0300
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:AST
DTSTART:20241103T050000
END:STANDARD
BEGIN:DAYLIGHT
TZOFFSETFROM:-0400
TZOFFSETTO:-0300
TZNAME:ADT
DTSTART:20250309T060000
END:DAYLIGHT
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0300
TZOFFSETTO:-0400
TZNAME:AST
DTSTART:20251102T050000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250626T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250626T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20250603T145707Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250717T130805Z
UID:6870-1750939200-1750942800@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Dr. Codie Primeau
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Codie Primeau \nPresentation topic: Citizen Science: An approach to engage the public and co-develop research questions \nRegister here: https://bit.ly/3FDNAM8 \nDownload the flier here. \nLearning objectives – by the end of the presentation\, participants will be able to: \n1) Understand what citizen science is and how it can enhance public engagement by breaking down barriers to inclusivity in health research.\n2) Explain how citizen science can actively involve patients and the public in co-creating and prioritizing research driven by community priorities.\n3) Discuss an example of ongoing citizen science work with 2S/LGBTQIA+ communities with chronic pain and how the approach supports meaningful community participation in the full research program. \n  \nBio \nDr. Codie Primeau (he/him; il) is an Assistant Professor in the School of Physical Therapy at Western University and an Affiliate Scientist with Arthritis Research Canada. His research focuses on arthritis\, pelvic health\, chronic pain\, and 2S/LGBTQIA+ health\, with an emphasis on equity\, inclusion\, and patient and community engagement. He studies clinical and cost-effectiveness of physiotherapy and surgical interventions and works to improve access to affirming care. He also leads initiatives to strengthen 2S/LGBTQIA+ representation in physiotherapy education and collaborates with national and community-based organizations with the aim to enhance health outcomes for underrepresented communities. \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions. \n  \nView the recording here: https://youtu.be/8ZgGnmKkWcg?si=T_MdnYIyCLLXbKjs
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-dr-codie-primeau/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20250617
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20250620
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20241106T144520Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250610T210008Z
UID:6672-1750118400-1750377599@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Summer Institute 2025
DESCRIPTION:2025 KT Canada Summer Institute\nKT Canada is pleased to be co-hosting this year’s Summer Institute with: \nBC SUPPORT Unit \nHealth Research BC \nKnowledge Translation Program\, Unity Health Toronto \nOntaro SPOR Support Unit \nSimon Fraser University Knowledge Mobilization Hub \nUniversity of British Columbia Knowledge Exchange Unit \n InformationGuests & SpeakersApplyAgendaSponsors and PartnersTestimonialsProgramWe are pleased to announce the Knowledge Translation (KT) Canada Summer Institute to be held in Vancouver\, British Columbia\, from June 17-19\, 2025. It’s being held at the Simon Fraser University Harbourfront Centre. The theme for this Summer Institute will be “KT and learning health systems”. \nIn the context of a learning health system (LHS)\, expertise in knowledge synthesis and implementation practice/evaluation are essential. This is illustrated in Figure 2 of this document from the Ontario SPOR Support Unit\, which presents the Learning Health System Action Framework. An LHS environment also provides opportunities for KT scientists to address research questions that advance KT/implementation science\, e.g.\, they might explore the contexts that enable meaningful patient engagement in implementing stroke management guidelines in a health authority. \nThe Summer Institute incorporates both the science and practice of KT. Trainees from the Summer Institute may pursue careers in KT science\, KT practice\, or both\, across various settings. \nWith the theme of KT and LHS\, we will feature a career panel that includes KT/implementation scientists working in LHS environments. They will share how their KT training has shaped their work. \nThe Summer Institute provides 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 also provide participants with the chance to network with colleagues including national and international KT experts. \nThe Summer Institute is aimed at graduate students\, post-doctoral and clinical fellows\, 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. We encourage applications from a wide range of disciplines that span all of CIHR’s research themes (clinical\, health services\, and population health). \nRegistration \nRegistration fee for trainees and fellows will be $480 CAD \nRegistration fee for junior faculty and research staff will be $1\,075 CAD \nPlease note\, accommodations are not included in the cost. We have reserved space with several hotels in the area. \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions. \n Speakers and facilitators will be a mix of KT Canada faculty and local experts. We will be adding speakers to this page as we get closer to the event. \n  \nElder Ruth Alfred is of Mamtagela ancestry through her Grandfather Price Bruce\, Grandmother Julia Nelson-Bruce and mother Florence Bruce-Stadnyk\, and Ukrainian through her father Andrew Stadnyk. Ruth was born and raised in Alert Bay\, marrying into the Namgis Nation. She left Alert Bay in 1986 to find work when the fishing industry collapsed. She raised two daughters as a single parent\, eventually moving to North Vancouver in 1990 after both girls went on their own. Ruth has six grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. She and her partner have lived in North Vancouver for 38 years. \nRuth worked various jobs in retail until becoming the Elder Program Coordinator at the Vancouver Aboriginal Friendship Centre for two years. She worked at the Pacific Association of First Nations Women for 15 years until her retirement in 2017. In 2018\, Ruth became a member of the Elder Knowledge Keepers at Indigenous Health and Wellness\, which she was a part of until recently. She was the Elder in Residence at Heatley Community Health Centre and Ravensong Clinic\, doing one-on-one sessions with patients. \nRuth also does patient visits at Lions Gate Hospital and Vancouver General Hospital. For over 23 years\, she worked as an outreach worker for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people in the Downtown Eastside\, assisting with housing\, medical assistance and support at hearings for Residential School Survivors after helping them with their claim forms for restitution. \nRuth attended North Island Secondary School\, the North Island College Early Childhood program and the Native Education College Office Administration Program. \nDr. Skye Barbic is a registered occupational therapist\, Canada Research Chair in Integrated Youth Services\, and an Associate Professor at the University of British Columbia in the Faculty of Medicine. Dr. Barbic’s focus of research is on learning health systems\, measurement-based care\, and the implementation of youth centered interventions. She is passionate about systems transformation through community engagement\, meaningful measurement\, and innovation. \nDr. Lupin Battersby is SFU’s Director\, Knowledge Mobilization (KM). In this role she provides training\, consulting and mentoring\, and is working to support better institutional recognition for KM and research impact. Her KM interest was sparked 20 years ago when holding two contracts\, one as a clinical counsellor\, the other a research assistant\, and she experienced first-hand the gap between research and practice. Since that time\, she has worked in roles in and out of academia with a primary focus on the challenges and opportunities to mobilize research in various areas including health services\, equity\, mental health\, housing\, aging\, and climate action. \n  \n  \n \nDr. Simonne Collins is a CHILD-BRIGHT Network post-doctoral fellow based at the IWK Health Centre in Halifax. Simonne’s research focuses on enhancing the implementation of interventions that improve child and family health. This includes exploring the uniqueness of children’s context and how we can leverage existing structures in a child’s life (i.e. schools and extended caregiver circles) to increase implementation success. Simonne is applying her research findings to support the IWK Health’s Learning Health System initiative. Simonne’s background is in neuropsychology\, having completed her PhD in the School of Psychological Sciences at Monash University in Australia in 2022. Simonne has experience in leading co-designed research in pediatric populations with developmental health conditions. \n  \n \nDr. Janet Curran is a Professor in the School of Nursing at Dalhousie University and a Research Chair in Quality and Patient Safety at IWK Health\, Nova Scotia Health and Dalhousie University. She is the Implementation Science Co-lead for the CHILDBRIGHT Network and the Scientific Lead in the Strengthening Transitions in Care lab at IWK Health where her program of research is focused on co-designing and evaluating best practice and policy change interventions to improve transitions in care for patients and families. Her co-design work is informed by collaborating with multiple stakeholders including patients\, parents and caregivers\, healthcare providers\, and policy makers. \n  \n \nDr. Maoliosa (Mo) Donald\, PhD is an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Cumming School of Medicine\, University of Calgary. She is trained as a health services researcher\, implementation scientist\, and physical therapist. Her research interests include interventions that support person-centered care\, and innovations that address the evidence-practice gap. Mo has extensive experience in stakeholder engagement in the implementation of health innovations. She is interested in applying theories\, methods\, and frameworks to determine factors that promote or impede implementation\, adaptation\, and sustainability in ways that are effective and practical for various contexts. \n  \n \nDr. Christine (Tina) Fahim (PhD\, MSc) is a Scientist for the Knowledge Translation Program\, St. Michael’s Hospital and leads the Team for Implementation\, Evaluation and Sustainability (TIES). She is an Assistant Professor in the Institute of Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation at the University of Toronto and an Associate Scientist in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Bloomberg School of Public Health\, Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Fahim is a member of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research’s governing council. She 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 and a postdoctoral fellowship at the Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Fahim’s research focuses on the science and practice of knowledge translation to implement evidence-based interventions at the provider\, organization\, and health systems levels. \n \nDr. Clayon Hamilton\, PhD\, MHA (c)\, is a health system leader focused on advancing innovation and improvement through evidence-informed strategies and partnerships. Trained as a health services researcher at Western University and the University of British Columbia\, his expertise includes patient experience measurement\, patient engagement\, and knowledge mobilization. He has held leadership roles across British Columbia’s healthcare system\, including health authorities\, non-profits\, and at the Ministry of Health as an embedded scholar. Currently\, he is the Knowledge Exchange and Mobilization Leader at Foundry Central Office\, leading a team supporting the Learning Health System Initiative and other knowledge mobilization efforts across the Foundry network of centres delivering integrated youth service. He also holds adjunct faculty appointments at the University of British Columbia and Simon Fraser University. \nDr. Bev Holmes is a health research system leader with expertise and experience in and passion for the funding\, production and use of research evidence to improve health. She sits on research advisory groups across Canada and internationally\, is an associate editor at Implementation Science Communications and participates in the National Alliance of Provincial Health Research Organizations. \nShe gratefully makes her home on the traditional\, unceded territory of the Coast Salish peoples. \n  \nDr. Kerry Kuluski is the inaugural Dr. Mathias Gysler Research Chair in Patient and Family Centred Care at the Institute for Better Health at Trillium Health Partners and Associate Professor at the Institute of Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation (University of Toronto). She is an Applied Health Services Researcher and a Social Worker by training. She received her PhD in Health Services and Policy Research from the University of Toronto. Following that she was a Postdoctoral Visiting Fellow at the University of Oxford. At the U of T she supervises graduate students\, and developed a course on Patient and Caregiver Engagement in Research where she is Course Director. She is Associate Editor for an International Peer Reviewed Journal\, Health Expectations. She leads a program of research on the experiences of people with chronic health issues and their caregivers. Her goal is to improve quality and health system performance by working in partnership with patients\, family caregivers\, and care providers. \nDr. Linda Li is Professor and Harold Robinson/Arthritis Society Chair at the Department of Physical Therapy\, University of British Columbia\, and Senior Scientist at Arthritis Research Canada. Dr. Li’s research focuses on the integration of digital tools in rehabilitation\, including the use of wearables and apps to promote physical activity in people with arthritis\, and in older adults to prevent falls. Her work in knowledge translation and implementation science has led to a new line of studies on strategies for engaging with patients and the public in the research process. She held a Canada Research Chair in Patient-oriented Knowledge Translation in 2014-2024. Her work has been recognized by a Distinguished Scholar Award from the Association of Rheumatology Professionals in the U.S. In 2019\, she was inducted as Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. \nDr. Jasmin Ma is an assistant professor of teaching in the School of Kinesiology at the University of British Columbia\, a Clinician Investigator with Arthritis Research Canada\, and an Investigator with the International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries. She was named a UBC Knowledge Mobilization Scholar for her work in bridging her role as a kinesiologist and researcher\, working with clinicians and community members to provide physical activity participation opportunities for people with diverse physical abilities. She leads the Movement 4 All (M4A) lab which focusses on i) training heath and exercise professionals to integrate inclusive physical activity as a key healthcare strategy and ii) supporting strength training behaviour change among people with chronic disease and disability\, particularly people with spinal cord dysfunction and rheumatoid arthritis. \n  \n \nMonica Mamut is the Unit Director for the BC SUPPORT Unit\, part of Michael Smith Health Research BC. She is a seasoned senior leader with two decades of experience spanning research\, operations\, senior leadership\, and governance across Canada. She brings a rich blend of academic and practical expertise\, inclusive of a Master in Health Administration from the University of British Columbia and a Master of Science from the London School of Economics\, which complement her multidisciplinary approach to leadership. Monica is deeply committed to fostering meaningful\, strategic engagement with communities to drive sustainable and positive transformation within British Columbia’s health and health research ecosystems. Monica is married\, mama to two\, puppy parent to one and lives in North Vancouver. \n  \n \nDr. Sonia Singh is a hospitalist physician and osteoporosis consultant in the Fraser Health Authority\, based at Peace Arch Hospital in White Rock. New recipient of a five year Michael Smith Health Research BC Health Professional Investigator award\, Dr. Singh has been successful with a number of research operating grants in the area of osteoporosis and fall prevention\, including an Implementation Science Team grant from the Michael Smith Health Research BC for “Breaking the cycle of recurrent fracture: Scaling up a secondary fracture prevention program in Fraser Health to inform spread across British Columbia”. She sits on the Knowledge Mobilization Platform for Osnet\, a national research network supporting bone health research in Canada and holds academic appointments as Clinical Assistant Professor\, Faculty of Medicine\, UBC and Adjunct Professor\, Faculty of Health Sciences\, SFU. \n  \nDr. Sean Spina (RPh\, BSc(Pharm)\, ACPR\, PharmD\, FCSHP) is a leader in pharmacy practice advancement and a key contributor to the development of Learning Health Systems at Island Health. As a Regional Clinical Pharmacy Manager and researcher\, he has been instrumental in integrating data-driven decision-making and continuous learning into healthcare delivery. His work focuses on leveraging real-world evidence to improve patient care by engaging patients\, families\, clinicians\, and decision makers in the research process to optimize clinical workflows. Dr. Spina has participated in multiple innovative projects\, including Island Health’s Hospital at Home initiative\, and actively collaborates with interdisciplinary teams to advance healthcare transformation. He also holds an adjunct faculty position at the University of British Columbia\, where he mentors the next generation of healthcare professionals in applying learning health principles to clinical practice. He has authored several published articles on these topics and has received numerous local\, provincial\, and national awards for his work on clinical practice and patient care. Website: http://profiles.islandhealth.ca/sean-spina \nDr. Sharon E. Straus (CM\, MD\, MSc\, FRCPC) is a Geriatrician and Clinical Epidemiologist who trained at the University of Toronto and the University of Oxford. She is the Director of the Knowledge Translation Program; Executive Vice President\, Clinical Programs and Chief Medical Officer\, Unity Health Toronto; and Professor in Department of Medicine\, University of Toronto. She authored more than 650 peer-reviewed publications and 3 textbooks in evidence-based medicine\, knowledge translation and mentorship. Since 2015\, she has consistently been in the top 1% of highly cited clinical researchers as per Clarivate and has an H-index of 126. She holds more than $80 million in peer-reviewed research grants as a principal investigator. She has received national awards for mentorship\, research and education. She was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Medicine\, from the University of Montreal\, is a Fellow in the Royal Society of Canada and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences and a Member of the Order of Canada. \nDr. Jennifer Walker is a Haudenosaunee member of Six Nations of the Grand River with a Ph.D. in Community Health Sciences (Epidemiology) from the University of Calgary. She holds a Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Health Data and Aging at McMaster University and is an Associate Professor in the Department of Health Research Methods\, Evidence and Impact. \n  \n  \n  \n  \nDr. David Roger Walugembe – Program Manager Research Programs\, Health Research BC.  David is a Program Manager\, Research Programs at Health Research BC. Previously he was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the Department of Anesthesiology\, Pharmacology & Therapeutics\, Faculty of Medicine\, University of British Columbia\, Vancouver Campus. Prior to that\, David was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with the Solidarity for Vaccine Equity (SOLVE) Project under the Science of Health Equity Learning Lab (SHELL)\, in the Faculty of Health and Social Development\, University of British Columbia\, Kelowna Campus. He holds a PhD in Health Information Science from the University of Western Ontario\, a Master of Public Health from James P. Grant School of Public Health\, BRAC University in Bangladesh and a Bachelor’s degree in Library and Information Science from Makerere University in Uganda. Prior to enrolling for his Ph.D.\, David worked as a Project Manager for the Knowledge Translation (KTNET) Africa Project\, supporting 8 sub-Saharan African countries to translate their research findings into policy and practice. For his Ph.D. research project\, David used the Normalization Process Theory to explore variations in the implementation of an evidence informed health system level policy intervention aimed at improving maternal and child health outcomes in a low-income context. His research and teaching interests include implementation science\, integrated knowledge translation\, health systems and policy research\, maternal and child health\, health equity\, stakeholder engagement and sustainability. \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  Applications are now closed\, many thanks to all who applied.   \nStay updated via our social media and/ or newsletter: \nLinkedIn: @Knowledge Translation Program \nBluesky: @KTCanada and @KTProgram \nsubscribe to the KT Canada newsletter. Agenda topics: \n\nIntro to KT: What is it and isn’t\nIntro to learning health systems and KT\nWorkshop: Enhancing communication skills\nWhat are theories\, models and frameworks and how do I choose one?\nPatient & public involvement in research\nIntersectionality and KT\nKT interventions\nOutcomes evaluation\nPanel: Career paths in KT\nPanel: KT and learning health systems\nSpeed mentoring meetings\nSmall group work\, facilitated by KT experts\n\n  We extend a huge thank you to our sponsors and partners! \n  \n  \n  \n \n  \n \n  \n \n  \n \n  \n \n  \n See what past Summer Institute participants are saying: \n\n“I really liked the engagement with other trainees and faculty members. It was a very collaborative experience.“\n“I think the institute was structured very well. There was a good variety of lectures\, workshops\, and breaks. I never felt too overwhelmed or fatigued. The content was directly relevant to me and my work in patient engagement.“\nEllen Wang – “Growing understanding of knowledge translation practice and research“\nDownload the program here. 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-summer-institute-2025/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250522T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250522T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20250424T122628Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251103T131135Z
UID:6832-1747915200-1747918800@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Drs. Ian Graham & Robert McLean
DESCRIPTION:Presenters: Drs. Ian Graham & Robert McLean \nPresentation topic: Designing\, doing\, and evaluating research co-production: The Research Quality Plus for Co-Production (RQ+ 4 Co-Pro) approach \nView the recorded presentation here. \nRegister here: https://bit.ly/42rbEKN \nDownload the flier here. \nLearning objectives – by the end of the presentation\, participants will be able to: \n1) Understand the concept of research co-production\,\n2) Understand the provenance of the RQ+ 4 Co-Pro framework\,\n3) Understand the components and potential applications of the RQ+ 4 Co-Pro framework. \n  \nBios \nDr. Ian D Graham is a Distinguished University Professor in the Schools of Epidemiology and Public & Nursing at the University of Ottawa\, and Senior Scientist at the Centre for Implementation Research in the Methods and Implementation Research program of the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. He is a health sociologist by training with extensive experience as a health services researcher and implementation scientist. Dr. Graham is a pioneer in the fields of knowledge translation and implementation science being the originator of such frameworks and models as the Knowledge to Action Framework\, Ottawa Model of Research Use\, and most recently\, Implementation Roadmap. From 2006-2012 he was seconded to the Canadian Institutes of Health Research as Vice President of Knowledge Translation. He has been inducted as a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences\, New York Academy of Medicine and Royal Society of Canada and twice awarded a Queen Elizabeth II Jubilee Medal (2002\, 2012) for contributions to research. \nDr. Robert McLean is a Senior Program Specialist in Global Health at Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC) where he leads IDRC’s flagship research program Advancing Research for Climate and Health. Rob has worked in research evaluation and knowledge translation in the academic and research funding domains\, with an interest in collaborative approaches to knowledge generation. He earned his Ph.D. in the Department of Medicine at Stellenbosch University\, South Africa. \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-drs-ian-graham-robert-mclean/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250430T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250430T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20250318T161437Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250318T161437Z
UID:6812-1746014400-1746018000@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Dr. Emma Kay
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Emma Kay \nPresentation topic: Shared Voices\, Shared Results: Community-Engaged Methods in Health Equity Research \nRegister here: https://bit.ly/4hlQ8eK \nLearning objectives – by the end of the presentation\, participants will be able to: \n1) Describe the continuum of community engagement in research and identify key equity indicators and contextual factors that influence community-researcher partnerships.\n2) Apply practical strategies for engaging community stakeholders\, including stakeholder mapping techniques\, co-design methodologies\, and approaches for building rapport with community organizations.\n3) Articulate the essential components of successful community-engaged research\, including terminology considerations\, shared leadership structures\, and strategies for ensuring sustainability. \nBio: Dr. Kay is an Associate Professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Nursing. She has developed a rigorous community-engaged research agenda focused on harm reduction and improving health outcomes for people with and affected by HIV\, leveraging prior experience as the founding director of a community-based research organization. Dr. Kay leads an R01 funded by the US National Institute on Drug Abuse that aims to develop the first harm reduction intervention for people with HIV who use drugs to incorporate both structural services (e.g.\, naloxone) and relational strategies (i.e.\, encompassing the patient-provider relationship). \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-dr-emma-kay/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250313T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250313T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20250304T132338Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250318T150922Z
UID:6784-1741867200-1741870800@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Dr. David Campbell
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. David Campbell \nPresentation topic:Use of Community-Driven Arts-Based Methods to Communicate Lived Experiences to Diverse Audiences \nView the recording here:\n \n  \nDownload the slides here:\nUse of Community-Driven Arts-Based Methods - KT Canada - Mar 13 2025 \n  \nLearning objectives – by the end of the presentation\, participants will be able to: \n1) Explain different forms of arts-based methods of knowledge mobilization;\n2) Understand the potential role of arts-based methods for reaching different audiences;\n3) Describe ways that impact of arts-based knowledge mobilization efforts could be evaluated. \nBio: Dr. David Campbell (MD\, PhD) is a medical specialist in Endocrinology & Metabolism and a health services researcher focused on social disparities\nand their impacts on clinical outcomes of cardiometabolic diseases\, like diabetes. He is the co-director of the Health Policy Trials Unit at the O’Brien Institute for Public Health at the University of Calgary. He conducts research that uses mixed methods\, interventional approaches\, community and stakeholder engagement\, and knowledge translation to contribute to reducing the impact of social disadvantage on clinical outcomes by informing health policy and clinical practice. \nDownload the flier here. \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-dr-david-campbell/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250213T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250213T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240814T174044Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250404T134549Z
UID:6608-1739448000-1739451600@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Dr. Leah Crockett
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Leah Crockett \nPresentation topic: Research partnerships in child health: exploring characteristics\, processes\, dynamics and effects \nLearning objectives – by the end of the presentation\, participants will be able to: \n1) Describe the scope and nature of partnered child health research\, \n2) Identify the relational dynamics\, role-specific motivations\, and logistical challenges that influence the sustainability and effectiveness of research partnerships in child health\, and \n3) Consider the shared and unique aspects of research partnerships in child health compared to other health research contexts. \n  \nView the recording here: \n \n  \nBio: Dr. Leah Crockett is a Banting Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Pediatrics and Child Health at the University of Manitoba\, embedded in the Research into the Enhancement of Acute Care for Children’s Health (REACH) theme at the Children’s Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba. Under the mentorship of Dr. Kathryn Sibley\, her doctoral work explored the characteristics\, processes\, dynamics\, and effects of research partnerships in child health. Her postdoctoral work focuses on an implementation RCT to enhance pediatric readiness in Manitoba’s rural emergency departments\, examining contextual\, intersectional\, and system-level factors that influence implementation effectiveness. Leah is passionate about bridging research\, policy\, and practice through meaningful research partnerships. \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-leah-crockett/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241212T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241212T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240814T173632Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241125T201035Z
UID:6606-1734004800-1734008400@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Dr. Roberta de Carvalho Corôa
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Roberta de Carvalho Corôa \nPresentation topic: Strategies for involving patients and the public in scaling initiatives in health and social services: A scoping review \nRegister here! https://bit.ly/3OrIcwg \n  \nLearning objectives – by the end of the presentation\, participants will be able to: \n\nIdentify the strategies for involving patients and the public in scaling initiatives in health and social services\,\nIdentify knowledge gaps regarding strategies for involving patients and the public in scaling initiatives in health and social services\,\nDescribe the appropriate methodology for conducting a scoping review.\n\nBio: Dr. Roberta de Carvalho Corôa was born in Brazil and earned her PhD in sociology at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. Since 2010\, she has been working as a research collaborator at the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation\, the largest public health institution in Latin America. In 2021\, she began her postdoctoral fellowship at the Canada Research Chair in Shared Decision Making and Knowledge Mobilization at Université Laval. She has since been working on implementation science with the goal of demonstrating and scaling the impact of interventions that can enhance people’s experiences with healthcare systems. She is particularly interested in patient-centered approaches in research. It is crucial for her to bring a sociological perspective\, representing Global South knowledge\, to the field of public health. Her ongoing projects aim to identify effective strategies for involving patients and the public in scaling health and social services\, as well as to develop scalable patient decision aids for vulnerable women in Brazil and Canada. \n  \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-roberta-de-carvalho-coroa/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241114T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241114T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240814T172023Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241016T150901Z
UID:6604-1731585600-1731589200@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Keila Turino Miranda
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Keila Turino Miranda \nPresentation topic: Can-SOLVE CKD: Capturing our IDEA (Inclusion\, Diversity\, Equity\, and Accessibility) journey as a patient-oriented kidney research network \nRegister here!  \nLearning objectives:  \n1. Understand the role of IDEA in research networks\,\n2. Explore co-development strategies for IDEA mobilization\,\n3. Identify barriers and opportunities in IDEA implementation. \nPresenter bio: Keila Turino Miranda is a second year PhD student at McGill University\, with a background in Pharmacology (BSc) and Medical Science (MSc). She is leading a novel research branch focused on cardiovascular health and autonomic regulation in transgender\, gender-diverse\, and non-binary adults. Keila serves as the Inclusion\, Diversity\, Equity and Accessibility (IDEA) Consultant for Can-SOLVE CKD\, a CIHR SPOR network\, where she led a pan-Canadian needs assessment to capture and integrate IDEA principles. Keila is a leader in the EDI field and has authored 10 peer-reviewed articles\, secured over $86k in competitive funding and presented at over 20 conferences. \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-keila-turino-miranda/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241010T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241010T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240814T165244Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240918T142403Z
UID:6602-1728561600-1728565200@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Brenda Tittlemier
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Brenda Tittlemier \nRegister here: https://bit.ly/3MH9bmV \nDownload the flier here.  \nPresentation topic: Investigating Evaluation and Effects of Partnered Rehabilitation Research \nLearning objectives – after the presentation the audience will be able to:\n• Identify the extent of evaluation of partnered rehabilitation research\n• Identify effects of partnered rehabilitation research on the research process and outcomes\n• Understand how partnering on rehabilitation research contributes to effects \nBio: Brenda Tittlemier is a PhD candidate at the University of Manitoba and is supervised by Dr. Kathryn Sibley. Her doctoral research has investigated the evaluation and effects of partnered rehabilitation research using explanatory sequential mixed methods. Furthermore\, Brenda has been a licensed physiotherapist for nearly 20 years. She is currently employed as an embedded researcher in a publicly funded physiotherapy department in Winnipeg\, Manitoba. In this role\, Brenda facilitates the use of physiotherapy evidence to inform clinical practice\, program development and evaluation\, and policy development. She is passionate about implementing initiatives to enhance involvement of physiotherapy employees in research. \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions. \n \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-brenda-tittlemier/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240912T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240912T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240814T163835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241007T154921Z
UID:6596-1726142400-1726146000@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Dr. Lisa Strifler
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Lisa Strifler \nDownload the flier. \nDownload the presentation slides here. \nPresentation title: Development and usability testing of a support tool to identify models and frameworks to inform the practice of KT \nLearning objectives – After the presentation\, the audience will be able to:\n1. Describe the differences between theories\, models and frameworks for KT and how they are used in practice\,\n2. Identify key barriers and facilitators to identifying and selecting theories\, models and frameworks in KT research and practice\,\n3. Learn about a new online support tool to help KT practitioners to identify an appropriate model or framework to inform their work. \nBio: Dr. Lisa Strifler recently completed her PhD at the University of Toronto’s Institute of Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health. Her doctoral research used rigorous methods guided by models and evidence on implementation science and user-centered design\, to develop and test the usability of an online support tool for KT practitioners. Her thesis project was supported by a CIHR Doctoral Research Award.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-dr-lisa-strifler/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240619
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240622
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240103T182429Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241106T190903Z
UID:6425-1718755200-1719014399@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Summer Institute 2024
DESCRIPTION:2024 KT Canada Summer Institute\nKT Canada is pleased to be co-hosting this year’s Summer Institute with Dalhousie University. \n \n InformationSpeakersApplyAgendaSponsorsTestimonialsWe are pleased to announce the Knowledge Translation (KT) Canada Summer Institute to be held in Halifax\, Nova Scotia\, from June 19-21\, 2024. This event is being hosted jointly with Dalhousie University. \nThe theme for this year’s event is “Integrating the Science and Practice of Knowledge Translation“. \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 chance to network with colleagues including national and international KT experts. \nThe Summer Institute is aimed at graduate students\, post-doctoral and clinical fellows\, 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. We encourage applications from a wide range of disciplines that span all of CIHR’s research themes (clinical\, health services\, and population health). \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions. \n  \n   \nDr. Melissa Brouwers is a Professor and the Director of the School of Epidemiology and Public Health (SEPH) in the Faculty of Medicine at University of Ottawa. She also holds appointments at McMaster University in the Department of Oncology and the Department of Health Research Methods\, Evidence and Impact (HEI). At SEPH\, Dr. Brouwers is a co-leader of the Knowledge Synthesis and Application Unit (https://www.ksau.ca/) and a co-lead of the AGREE Research Enterprise (www.agreetrust.com). Dr. Brouwers holds a wealth of experience as a health services researcher with special interest in knowledge translation\, implementation science and evaluation\, and knowledge synthesis and guidelines. She has a passion for graduate school education and international research collaborations. She obtained her PhD in Social Psychology from Western University. \n  \nAafreen Campbell is a Health Systems Manager on the Integrated Acute and Episodic Care Network at Nova Scotia Health. She has experience working in diverse portfolios and leading strategic planning sessions with the goal to optimize healthcare systems and the delivery of patient care. Aafreen has years of clinical experience as a Dentist and holds a Masters in Health Administration (MHA). She is passionate about implementing evidence-informed\, data-driven decisions in healthcare. Aafreen is currently focused on health service design for perinatal\, newborn\, and pediatric services. \n  \n  \nDr. Christine Cassidy is a registered nurse with expertise in implementation science\, evidence-based practice\, and behaviour change. She completed her BScN at the University of Prince Edward Island and PhD in Nursing at Dalhousie University. Dr. Cassidy also completed a CIHR Health System Impact Postdoctoral Fellowship at the IWK Health Centre and University of Ottawa with the Integrated Knowledge Translation (IKT) Research Network. Her program of research uses an IKT approach to design\, implement\, and evaluate evidence-based practices and knowledge translation interventions in pediatric care. \n  \nDr. Janet Curran is a Professor in the School of Nursing at Dalhousie University and a Research Chair in Quality and Patient Safety at IWK Health\, Nova Scotia Health and Dalhousie University. She is the Scientific Lead in the Strengthening Transitions in Care lab at IWK Health where her program of research is focused on co-designing and evaluating best practice and policy change interventions to improve transitions in care for patients and families. Her co-design work is informed by collaborating with multiple stakeholders including patients\, parents and caregivers\, healthcare providers\, and policy makers.\n \n  \nDr. Tim Disher is a registered nurse with Vanier CGS funded doctoral training in advanced synthesis and medical decision making at the Dalhousie University School of Nursing. His current role is as Senior Director at EVERSANA where he leads a team of over twenty statisticians to develop and execute protocols and statistical analysis plans for meta-analyses and network meta-analyses based on both aggregate and individual participant data\, matching-adjusted indirect comparisons\, simulated treatment comparisons\, and a variety of predictive and causal models leveraging clinical trial and real-world data sources. His work is published in high-impact journals including JAMA Pediatrics\, Pediatrics\, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. He maintains active academic collaborations focused on design and analysis of clinical trials\, is an active co-investigator on Canadian Institutes of Health Research-funded RCTs\, has developed and delivered training in the statistical methods for network meta-analyses for pharmaceutical and medical device companies\, and delivered workshops at international conferences. \n  \nDr. Christine (Tina) Fahim is an implementation scientist and leads the Team for Implementation\, Evaluation and Sustainability at the Knowledge Translation Program\, St. Michael’s Hospital. She is also an Assistant Professor at the Dalla Lana school of Public health\, University of Toronto\, and an Associate Scientist in the Department of Health Policy and Management at Johns Hopkins University\, Bloomberg School of Public Health. She 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 and a postdoctoral fellowship at the Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health\, Department of Health Policy and Management. Dr. Fahim’s research focuses on the science and practice of knowledge translation to implement evidence-based interventions at the provider\, organization\, and systems level. \n  \nDr. Keisha Jefferies is an African Nova Scotian nurse scientist\, an Assistant Professor\, and a University Research Chair in the School of Nursing at Dalhousie University. She is the director of her emerging program of research\, M-BRACe (Multidisciplinary Black Research and Advocacy Centre)\, which is a research hub for dedicated to developing evidence-informed initiatives and supporting the future generation of critical health leaders. Dr. Jefferies has clinical experience in neonatal intensive care and breastfeeding support. Her doctoral research\, funded by several prestigious provincial and federal awards such as Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships\, Killam Trust\, and Research Nova Scotia\, examined the leadership experiences of African Nova Scotian nurses in healthcare. Dr. Jefferies’ research interests include Black population health\, nursing leadership\, and inclusivity in nursing education and practice. She has expertise in the areas of health policy\, qualitative research\, and evidence syntheses. Importantly\, Dr. Jefferies uses Black Feminist Theory to critically inform and guide her research and advocacy. Much of her advocacy includes equity and inclusivity in post-secondary institutions and the nursing profession. Notably\, in 2017\, Dr. Jefferies co-founded the peer-mentorship group\, the Community of Black Students in Nursing at Dalhousie University. \n  \n \nDr. Linda Li is Professor and Harold Robinson/Arthritis Society Chair at the Department of Physical Therapy\, University of British Columbia\, and Senior Scientist at Arthritis Research Canada. Dr. Li’s research focuses on the integration of digital tools in rehabilitation\, including the use of wearables and apps to promote physical activity in people with arthritis\, and in older adults to prevent falls. Her work in knowledge translation and implementation science has led to a new line of studies on strategies for engaging with patients and the public in the research process. She held a Canada Research Chair in Patient-oriented Knowledge Translation in 2014-2024. Her work has been recognized by a Distinguished Scholar Award from the Association of Rheumatology Professionals in the U.S. In 2019\, she was inducted as Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. \n  \n \nFrank MacMaster\, PhD is the IWK’s Vice President\, Research and Innovation and a Professor of Psychiatry at the Dalhousie School of Medicine. Dr. MacMaster joins us from the University of Calgary where he was an Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics at the Cumming School of Medicine and was also the Scientific Director for the Provincial Addictions and Mental Health for Alberta Health Services. \nOriginally from Nova Scotia\, MacMaster studied at Saint Mary’s and Dalhousie universities and did his training at the IWK in mental health. He holds a PhD in neurobiology and anatomy and was a postdoctoral fellow in brain imaging in child psychiatry at Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit\, Michigan. \n  \n  \n \nDr. Anne 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)\, and she is the Associate Dean for Implementation Research and Health Delivery Effectiveness in the School of Medicine. She is also a Research Scientist at the Center for Clinical Management Research at the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System. \nHer training is in nursing\, 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. \n  \nDr. Tara Sampalli has held multiple important roles at Nova Scotia Health Authority and has made significant contributions in each of these roles. She has been a manager\, the Director of Research\, Assistant Director of Research in Primary Health Care and more recently has held the position of Senior Director\, Implementation Science and Evaluation\, and Global Health Systems Planning in the Research\, Innovation & Discovery portfolio. In this role\, she leads the Implementation Science Team\, and the Network of Scholars and is working with many key partners in the province to support the Learning Health System strategy. Tara also holds an Assistant Professor position at the Faculty of Medicine at Dalhousie University. \nTara is currently leading and co-leading several priority implementations and innovations to enhance access and facilitate optimization of roles and practice for interprofessional teams and bringing care closer to home / in your community initiatives. She is also the lead for the Nova Scotia’s International Community of Health Care Workers Engagement (NICHE) Program for internationally educated and trained professionals in the province. \n  \nDr. Meaghan Sim is a scientist with the Implementation Science team at Nova Scotia Health (Research\, Innovation & Discovery portfolio).  Meaghan has a PhD (Interdisciplinary) (2017)\, a MSc in Applied Human Nutrition (2006)\, and a BSc Honours in Nutrition (2001). She has been a registered dietitian since 2006. Her research spans the areas of health systems\, maternal child health\, equity and the social determinants of health\, implementation science\, and interprofessional practice. \n  \n  \n  \nDr. Mari Somerville is a health system impact fellow and postdoc at IWK Health and Dalhousie University. Her program of research involves understanding the science of learning health systems and using these findings to implement evidence-based patient safety recommendations across the health centre. The aim of her research is to improve the quality of care for women and children who visit the IWK and to incorporate evidence into practice as an embedded researcher. Previously\, Mari completed her PhD at Griffith University in Australia where she explored the nutrition care delivery for people living with prediabetes. Mari also has a Bachelor of Science in Nutrition\, a Master of Public Health in Community Nutrition and is a registered dietitian. Her research interests include health services delivery\, patient-oriented research and nutrition care access. \n  \n  \nDr. Sharon E. Straus is a geriatrician and clinical epidemiologist who trained at the University of Toronto and the University of Oxford. She is the Director of the Knowledge Translation Program and Physician-in-Chief\, St. Michael’s Hospital and Professor in Department of Medicine\, University of Toronto. She holds a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Knowledge Translation and Quality of Care and has authored more than 500 peer-reviewed publications and 3 textbooks in evidence-based medicine\, knowledge translation and mentorship. Since 2015\, she has consistently been in the top 1% of highly cited clinical researchers as per Clarivate and has an H-index of 106. She holds more than $60 million in peer-reviewed research grants as a principal investigator. She has received national awards for mentorship\, research and education. She was inducted as a Fellow in the Royal Society of Canada in November 2021 and named as a Member of the Order of Canada in December 2021. \n  Applications are now closed. Thank you to all who applied! Sessions for this Summer Institute include (subject to change): \n\nIntroduction to knowledge translation/ knowledge mobilization – What it is\, and isn’t\nWhat are theories\, models & frameworks and how do I choose one?\nPatient and public engagement in research\nKT interventions of proven effectiveness\nProcess evaluation\nOutcomes evaluation\nSmall group work\nPoster sessions\nPanel discussions\nMentoring\n\nMore schedule details will be posted here as they are finalized. Huge thank you to our sponsors! \n  \n \n \n \n See what past Summer Institute participants are saying: \n\n“I really liked the engagement with other trainees and faculty members. It was a very collaborative experience.“\n“I think the institute was structured very well. There was a good variety of lectures\, workshops\, and breaks. I never felt too overwhelmed or fatigued. The content was directly relevant to me and my work in patient engagement.“\nEllen Wang – “Growing understanding of knowledge translation practice and research“
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-summer-institute-2024/
LOCATION:Dalhousie University\, Halifax\, Nova Scotia\, Canada
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240509T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240509T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240412T173953Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240416T130157Z
UID:6547-1715256000-1715259600@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Dr. Khara Sauro
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Khara Sauro \nRegister here: https://bit.ly/3xGKiTS \nPresentation title: Implementing AI: Barriers and facilitators to adopting AI-based tools in healthcare \nLearning objectives – After the presentation\, the audience will:\n1. Understand the barriers and facilitators to implementing AI-based tools in healthcare\n2. Understand the differences and similarities between implementing AI-based tools and other interventions\n3. Be able to design implementation strategies for AI-based tools based on identified barriers and facilitators. \nBio: Dr. Khara Sauro is an Assistant Professor and Ohlson Professor of Head & Neck Health\, in the Department of Surgery\, with cross appointments in the Departments of Community Health Sciences and Oncology. Dr. Sauro’s research focuses on improving the quality and safety of care for patients with cancer\, especially those who undergo major surgical treatment\, to optimize the health of these patients. Dr. Sauro has a particular interest in leveraging routinely collected administrative data to evaluate the quality of healthcare and the effectiveness of implementing interventions to improve healthcare delivery. She uses diverse methodologies (qualitative and quantitative) to ask and appropriately answer clinically relevant research questions.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-dr-khara-sauro/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240411T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240411T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240404T140158Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240404T140158Z
UID:6526-1712836800-1712840400@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Patient Engagement in Trials - Linda Hunter
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Linda Hunter \nRegister here: https://bit.ly/43BkQvd \n  \nTopic: Regaining Power and Control Living with Chronic Pain: My Journey as a Patient Research Partner \nLearning objectives: \nAt the end of this presentation the participants will:\n1. Understand how a patient diagnosis can lead to a journey that ends in patient partnership in research\n2. Describe what patient engagement in research really means\n3. Explain some common challenges and barriers that frustrate patient partners\n4. Examine how you might be more open to patient co-partnership in research. \nBiography: Linda Hunter is a semi-retired executive health care leader and former Chief Nurse Executive and ICU nurse who has worked locally\, nationally\, and internationally in healthcare over the last 35 years. Linda has worked clinically\, in education\, and administration\, throughout the continuum of care in healthcare. Linda is an expert in quality improvement and performance measurement and has worked extensively in the quality and patient safety fields in healthcare. Linda is also a patient and lives with spinal stenosis\, osteoarthritis\, fibromyalgia\, and severe degenerative disc disease and has lived with chronic pain for over 15 years. Linda is a CIHR Patient Engagement Research Ambassador for the Institute of Musculoskeletal Health and Arthritis and is a member of the Institute’s Advisory Board. She has co-developed online educational modules for patients and researchers about Patient Engagement in Research. Linda is an Essential Caregiver to her Mum\, who lives with dementia\, and is a volunteer who provides palliative and end-of-life care to residents in LTC.\nLinda states: “It is vital that the patient voice is respected\, listened to\, and incorporated into change in the delivery of health care services\, including research. Patients are experts about their disease and the lived experience. They are becoming more informed and knowledgeable\, and it is imperative that they are included in the development of plans of what is researched and help bring that to the clinical world.”
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-patient-engagement-in-trials-linda-hunter/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240314T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240314T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240214T211935Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240214T211935Z
UID:6482-1710417600-1710421200@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Future Directions in Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health: Where are we now and where can we go from here?- Dr. Wynne Norton
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Wynne Norton \nTopic: Future Directions in Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health: Where are we now and where can we go from here? \nLearning objectives – after the presentation\, participants will be able to: \n\nDescribe the broad state-of-the-science in dissemination and implementation research\,\nEnhance their knowledge on key dissemination and implementation research topics and methods\,\nIdentify ways in which the field may grow in the future and opportunities for doing so.\n\nBiography \n \nWynne E. Norton\, Ph.D.\, is a Program Director in Implementation Science in the Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences (DCCPS) at the National Cancer Institute. Dr. Norton’s scientific interests include de-implementation of ineffective practices\, pragmatic trials of implementation strategies\, rapid cycle interventional research in cancer care delivery\, and methodological and measurement issues in implementation science. She co-directed a virtual short course on cluster randomized trial designs in cancer care delivery research (2022) and a virtual workshop on advancing rapid cycle research to improve cancer-related care (2022)\, as well as serving as a member of the planning committee for a workshop on advancing data sharing for implementation science in cancer control (2022). \n  \n  \nRegistration: https://bit.ly/3UCznnI \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-future-directions-in-dissemination-and-implementation-research-in-health-where-are-we-now-and-where-can-we-go-from-here-dr-wynne-norton/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240208T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240208T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240129T175057Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240129T175136Z
UID:6459-1707393600-1707397200@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Bringing together Intersectionality and Implementation Science - Dr. Cole Etherington
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Cole Etherington\nTopic: Bringing together Intersectionality and Implementation Science \nLearning objectives: \n\nParticipants will be able to identify key principles of intersectionality\nParticipants will be able to identify how intersectionality can contribute to developing effective and equitable interventions\nParticipants will gain practical insights on integrating intersectionality within their research and practice\n\nBiography \n \nCole Etherington\, PhD is a sociologist and Senior Research Associate at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. Cole’s research focuses on integrating intersectionality considerations in knowledge translation and implementation science. His current work involves supporting the participation of diverse communities within the Canadian blood and plasma donation system. Outside of research\, Cole has a small hobby farm and enjoys spending time with his flock of chickens\, geese\, and ducks. \n  \n  \nRegistration: \nRegister Here: https://bit.ly/FebKT24 \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-bringing-together-intersectionality-and-implementation-science-dr-cole-etherington/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240130T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240130T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20240111T194613Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240111T194613Z
UID:6447-1706616000-1706619600@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Discussions about Scaling Science Frameworks and Innovation Impact Based on a Scoping Review with Dr. Anita Kothari
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Anita Kothari\nTopic: Discussions about Scaling Science Frameworks and Innovation Impact Based on a Scoping Review \nLearning objectives: \n• Participants will be able to identify scaling frameworks and scaling science.\n• Participants will be able to describe the connection between innovation scaling for the purposes of growth and scaling a research innovation to\nenhance impact for the public good.\n• Participants will be able to identify some gaps in the process of developing scaling frameworks. \nBiography \n \nDr. Anita Kothari is a Professor in the School of Health Studies at the University of Western Ontario. Her research focuses on understanding how to best support the use of research and knowledge in healthcare decision-making; within this domain\, she concentrates on integrated knowledge translation (i.e.\, research co-production) particularly in public health systems and services. Her academic background involved training in health research methodology\, population health\, and health policy and services. \n  \n  \nRegistration: \nRegister Here: https://bit.ly/JanKT24 \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-anita-kothari/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231109T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231109T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20231023T172754Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231023T201821Z
UID:6361-1699531200-1699534800@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Mission Impossible: An Implementation Experience with Dr. Maoliosa Donald
DESCRIPTION:Presenter: Dr. Maoliosa Donald\nTopic: Mission Impossible: An Implementation Experience \nLearning objectives: \n\nApply the Pathway to Implementation\nExplore the application of various implementation theories\, models\, frameworks\nReflect on implementation efforts\n\nBiography \nDr. Maoliosa (Mo) Donald\, PhD is an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Cumming School of Medicine (Division of Nephrology) at the University of Calgary and is an Implementation Consultant with The Center for Implementation. She is a health services researcher and physical therapist. Dr. Donald’s research interests include interventions that support person-centered care\, and innovations that address the evidence-practice gap.z \n  \n  \nRegistration: \nRegister Here \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series/
CATEGORIES:Seminar Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20231019T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20231019T130000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20230928T151501Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20231011T183810Z
UID:6342-1697716800-1697720400@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series - Dr. Wanrudee Isaranuwatchai
DESCRIPTION:Topic: Help me help you: Potential roles of health economics and health technology assessment to support your research \nIn this presentation\, after the presentation\, the audience will be able to: \n\nTo recognize questions which health economics and health technology assessment can help answer\nTo understand how these methods can support your research and work\nTo observe some real-world examples of health economics and health technology assessment in action\n\n  \nPresenter biography: \nDr. Wanrudee Isaranuwatchai is a Program Leader and Senior Researcher of the Health Intervention and Technology Assessment Program (HITAP)\, Thailand. She is also an Affiliated Scientist at the Knowledge Translation Program (CLEAR Health Economics Unit)\, St. Michael’s Hospital\, and an Associate Professor at the Institute of Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation\, University of Toronto\, in Canada. \nHer research focuses on how to apply health economics and health technology assessment (HTA) in the real-world setting as well as how to advance methods in economic evaluation (EE). She has experience conducting EEs using various methods with specific interest in the potential of big data in health economics and HTA to support evidence generation and policy-making process. \nShe has also collaborated with researchers\, health professionals\, and policy-makers in various areas to help communicate the value of health initiatives using EE. She has contributed to the training on HTA to support health systems in Asia\, Africa\, and North America. Dr. Isaranuwatchai is dedicated to the creation and use of evidence in healthcare decision making. \n  \nDownload Flyer \nor \nRegister Here \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-dr-wanrudee-isaranuwatchai/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20230915T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20230915T100000
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20230804T172021Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230905T155050Z
UID:6312-1694768400-1694772000@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Seminar Series -Dr. Nick Sevdalis\, National University of Singapore
DESCRIPTION:Topic: Why and what are we controlling…? Reflections on how to design and manage control groups in hybrid effectiveness-implementation trials \n  \nIn this presentation\, Dr. Sevdalis will: \n\nOffer an overview of the nature of control groups in published effectiveness-implementation hybrid trials in health\nArticulate what is being controlled and with what aims and explore rationales for the choice of controls\nPresent illustrative case studies of hybrid trials\, demonstrating different considerations in selecting control groups\nShare his personal experiences of setting up and managing control groups\, including how to manage potential tensions arising in control arms of hybrid trials\n\nRegister here \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-seminar-series-dr-nick-sevdalis-national-university-of-singapore/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230614
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230617
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20221205T183945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230413T180257Z
UID:5890-1686700800-1686959999@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Summer Institute 2023
DESCRIPTION:2023 KT Canada Summer Institute\nKT Canada is pleased to be co-hosting this year’s Summer Institute with the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa. \n \nSee what previous participants are saying about the KT Canada Summer Institute\, check it out here. \n InformationSpeakersApplyAgendaSponsorsWe are pleased to announce the Knowledge Translation (KT) Canada Summer Institute to be held in Ottawa from June 14-16\, 2023. This event is being hosted jointly with the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa. \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 chance to network with colleagues including national and international KT experts. \nThe Summer Institute is aimed at graduate students\, post-doctoral and clinical fellows\, 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. We encourage applications from a wide range of disciplines that span all of CIHR’s research themes (clinical\, health services\, and population health). \nRegistration \nRegistration fee for trainees and fellows will most likely be in the $300-$400 range.\nFee for jr faculty and research staff will be in the $800-$900 range. \n  \n Dr. Sharon E. Straus is a geriatrician and clinical epidemiologist who trained at the University of Toronto and the University of Oxford. She is the Director of the Knowledge Translation Program and Physician-in-Chief\, St. Michael’s Hospital and Professor in Department of Medicine\, University of Toronto. She holds a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Knowledge Translation and Quality of Care and has authored more than 500 peer-reviewed publications and 3 textbooks in evidence-based medicine\, knowledge translation and mentorship. Since 2015\, she has consistently been in the top 1% of highly cited clinical researchers as per Clavirate and has an H-index of 106. She holds more than $60 million in peer-reviewed research grants as a principal investigator. She has received national awards for mentorship\, research and education. She was inducted as a Fellow in the Royal Society of Canada in November 2021 and named as a Member of the Order of Canada in December 2021. \n  \nDr. Linda Li is Professor and Harold Robinson/Arthritis Society Chair at the Department of Physical Therapy\, University of British Columbia\, and Senior Scientist at Arthritis Research Canada. She holds a Canada Research Chair in Patient-oriented Knowledge Translation. Linda’s research centers on improving the care for people with arthritis and supporting patient self-care. Her work focuses on the integration of online\, mobile\, and wearable tools in health care. Examples include the use of interactive decision aids for improving communication between patients and health professionals\, and the use of wearables and apps to promote physical activity in people with arthritis. Linda’s work in knowledge translation and implementation science has led to a new line of studies on the benefits of engaging patients and the public in the research process. \n  \nDr. Melissa Brouwers is a Professor and the Director of the School of Epidemiology and Public Health (SEPH) in the Faculty of Medicine at University of Ottawa. She also holds appointments at McMaster University in the Department of Oncology and the Department of Health Research Methods\, Evidence and Impact (HEI). At SEPH\, Dr. Brouwers is a co-leader of the Knowledge Synthesis and Application Unit (https://www.ksau.ca/) and a co-lead of the AGREE Research Enterprise (www.agreetrust.com). Dr. Brouwers holds a wealth of experience as a health services researcher with special interest in knowledge translation\, implementation science and evaluation\, and knowledge synthesis and guidelines. She has a passion for graduate school education and international research collaborations. She obtained her PhD in Social Psychology from Western University. \n  \nDr. Squires’ research is primarily focused on improving knowledge translation by healthcare professionals. Her current research centers on the design\, implementation\, and evaluation of theory-informed and context-optimized interventions to increase healthcare professionals’ use of research and research-based behaviours as a strategy to contribute to improved patient and system outcomes. Her research program has four main foci: (1) exploring organizational context and its role in knowledge translation\, (2) designing and testing theory-informed interventions to change healthcare professionals’ behaviours\, (3) measurement and survey design/psychometrics\, and (4) systematic reviews. She is currently involved in several nationally funded projects examining the role of context in knowledge translation and developing and testing interventions to change behaviour of healthcare professionals (e.g.\, increasing organ donation in adult hospitals\, improving hand hygiene practice in adult hospitals\, improving pain practices in pediatric hospitals\, and improving resident outcomes in nursing homes). \n  \nDr. Kednapa Thavorn is a Senior Scientist and a Scientific Lead of Health Economics at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. She is also an Associate Professor with the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa\, and an Adjunct Scientist at ICES (Full Status). She holds a Ph.D. in Health Services Research from the Institute of Health Policy\, Management and Evaluation (IHPME)\, University of Toronto. She completed post-doctoral fellowship programs in Applied Pharmacoeconomics from the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute\, St. Michael’s Hospital and Health Services Research from the IHPME\, University of Toronto. Her research focuses on health economics\, health technology assessment\, pharmacoepidemiology\, health equity\, care for people with complex needs\, and population health. As a health economist\, she has collaborated with researchers and policymakers in Canada and internationally on various health services research projects. OHRI Page: https://www.ohri.ca/profile/kthavorn  \n  \nDr. Andrea Patey is a Senior Clinical Research Associate within the Centre for Implementation Research at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute and an Adjunct Professor at School of Epidemiology and Public Health\, University of Ottawa and School of Rehabilitation Therapy\, Queen’s University. She holds a PhD in Health Psychology from City\, University of London. \nHer research sits at the intersection of behaviour sciences and implementation research applying psychological theory and methods to explain and change health professional behaviours across a range of clinical settings. Andrea’s specific interest centres around whether implementation (starting an evidence-based clinical practice behaviour) and de-implementation (stopping an ineffective or harmful clinical practice behaviour) differ\, and correspondingly\, whether interventions to target each should also differ. The broad objectives of her research are to promote the use of theory and rigorous methods to improve the delivery of evidence-based healthcare through the development and evaluation of complex behaviour change interventions. \n  \nProfessor Dawn Stacey is a Distinguished University Professor who holds the University Research Chair in Knowledge Translation to Patients (2012-2024). As a senior scientist at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute\, she is the scientific director of the Patient Decision Aids Research Group and member of the Centre for Implementation Research. She has expertise in decision sciences and implementation science. Her research is focused on developing\, evaluating\, and implementing interventions to support patients so they can be active partners in making health care decisions. She created and leads the pan-Canadian Oncology Symptom Triage and Remote Support (COSTaRS) research group. Dr. Stacey also leads interdisciplinary research teams in conducting original research with practical application for health care services\, patients\, families\, health care professionals\, and uOttawa students\, which is directly in line with the core aspirations in uOttawa’s strategic plan\, Transformation 2030. \nIn recognition of her outstanding and continuous accomplishments in research\, she has received the Canadian Association of Schools of Nursing Research of Excellence Award (2020)\, the University of Ottawa Award for Excellence in Research (2020-2021)\, Distinguished University Professor (2021-2022) and fellowships with the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences (FCAHS)\, American Academy of Nursing (FAAN)\, and the Canadian Academy of Nursing (FCAN). \n  \nMichele Whiteduck is an Algonquin Anishinaabe Ikwe from Pikwakanagan  First Nation. \nShe graduated in 2014 from Lakehead University in Thunder bay ON from the Native Language Instructor’s Program. She is a certified Native language teacher and has worked in the education department for the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan first nation from 2009 to present date. Michele teaches Algonquin language and culture from kinder level to grade 8 in the elementary schools in Eganville ON. Michele has also facilitated adult Algonquin language classes\, drumming and singing and moccassin making within her community and Algonquin College at the Pembroke site. She enjoys sewing\, drumming and singing and taking part in traditional ceremonies. Michele is a mother to 6 children and a Grandmother to 14 Grandchildren\, She is very Family oriented  and enjoys spending time with family and building memories.  \n  \nAdditional speakers and details will coming soon! Applications will be opening soon for the 2023 Summer Institute! \nThis year’s Summer Institute will be held jointly with the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa. It will be held in Ottawa\, ON on June 14-16. \nApplications are OPEN and we have extended the deadline to Sunday\, March 12th. \nApply Here \nEmail Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to with questions. Sessions for this Summer Institute include (subject to change): \n\nIntroduction to knowledge translation/ knowledge mobilization – What it is\, and isn’t\nWhat are theories\, models & frameworks and how to choose between them\nEngaging knowledge users\nKT interventions of proven effectiveness\nEvaluation using mixed methods\nEvaluation using economic analyses\nSmall group work\nPoster sessions\nPanel discussions\nMentoring\n\nMore schedule details will be posted here as they are finalized. Many thanks to our sponsors who help make the Summer Institute possible. \nGold Sponsors
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-summer-institute-2023/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230511
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230513
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20221205T204630Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230508T160730Z
UID:5926-1683763200-1683935999@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Scientific Meeting 2023
DESCRIPTION:2023 KT Canada Scientific Meeting\nKT Canada is pleased to be co-hosting this year’s meeting with the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa. \n \n  \nConference InformationGuest SpeakersRegistration and Hotel BookingAgendaProgramInfo for abstract presentersThe 2023 KT Canada Annual Scientific Meeting is being held on May 11-12\, 2023 in Ottawa\, Canada in a hybrid format. \nAbstract submission is now closed. \nRegistration will be opening soon – information will be posted under the “Registration” tab. \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  \nMeet with a KT Expert at the KT Canada-SEPH Scientific Meeting \nIn-person attendees of the KT Canada-SEPH Scientific Meeting have the opportunity to request a one-on-one\, 20-minute meeting with a KT expert to discuss a specific question or topic related to their work and research. We refer to these as “KT consults”. \nThe KT consult spaces 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 go live\, at the following link\, on Thursday\, April 27th at 12:00pm EST: https://knowledgetranslation.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_6ROjvq3DIFOSvky \nThe request form will close at 11:59pm EST on Weds\, May 3rd. \nPlease note that you must be registered to attend the meeting in-person in order for your request to be considered. We recommend completing your request form sooner than later in order improve your chance of meeting with your top choice. \nHow does the process work? \n-We will aim to grant the first choice of each request as they come in\, and as spots are available.\n-If your first choice is no longer available when you make your request\, we will try to give you your second choice (and so on).\n-We will try to give as many people as possible at least one of their requests (but it may not be possible in every case). \nThe KT Consults will take place in-person at the Scientific Meeting\, from 4:15-5:15pm ET on Thursday\, May 11th. We will contact you once the online form closes to let you know the results of your request. \nWe have confirmed the following KT experts for the consult sessions:\nDr. Jamie Brehaut\nDr. Melissa Brouwers\nDr. Ian Graham\nDr. Dawn Stacey\nDr. Sharon Straus \nRequests will close at 11:59pm EST on Weds\, May 3rd and we will be in touch with everyone afterwards. Clayon Hamilton\, PhD is a health services researcher by training\, Dr. Hamilton takes an evidence-informed and partnership approach to leadership in healthcare. After obtaining a PhD in Health and Rehabilitation Sciences at Western University\, he completed postdoctoral training in health services and knowledge translation at the University of British Columbia. He supported evaluation within the primary care sector at the BC Ministry of Health as a CIHR-MSFHR Health System Impact Fellow\, and held leadership roles in the provincial community-based mental health and substance use sector and the long-term care sector in BC’s largest regional health authority. Currently\, Dr. Hamilton is a Knowledge Exchange Lead at BC Mental Health and Substance Use Services\, a program within the Provincial Health Services Authority. \nIn addition\, he holds adjunct faculty appointments from both the University of British Columbia\, where he teaches a research course to medical students\, and Simon Fraser University\, where he teaches a certificate course on evaluating engagement. Passionate about meaningful partnerships\, Dr. Hamilton’s work embraces the principles of meaningful engagement\, and he leads projects to support patient engagement in research and healthcare system decision-making. His work has contributed evidence-based tools to support the practice and evaluation of patient engagement\, including\, notably\, the validated Patient Engagement In Research Scale (PEIRS)\, a significant resource for evaluating patient and family engagement in research. Dr. Hamilton has received several highly competitive awards and grants and co-authored over 20 peer-reviewed articles. In his spare time\, he enjoys going for runs with his family. \n  \nMaureen Smith has a long history of collaboration with the healthcare system subsequent to a rare disease diagnosis in childhood. She is the chair of Cochrane’s Consumer Network Executive and commissioner on the Global Commission on Evidence to Address Societal Challenges. Maureen is currently involved in three studies that use the integrated knowledge translation (iKT) approach and participated in a systematic review on decision coaching that was her introduction to iKT. As Chair of Ontario’s Strategy for Patient Oriented Research SUPPORT Unit’s Patient Partner Working Group and Board Member\, she has a keen interest in co-production and knowledge translation. \n  \nDr. Richard Oster is the Scientific Director of the Indigenous Wellness Core of Alberta Health Services\, based out of Edmonton\, Alberta\, Canada. Richard is also an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Agricultural\, Food & Nutritional Sciences (University of Alberta) and in the Department of Community Health Sciences\n(University of Calgary.). His research takes a strengths-based and partnership approach\, building specifically on Indigenous ways of knowing and the resilience and abundance within communities\, as opposed to using a deficit-focused western lens which tends to dominate the field. \n  \nDr. Marcia Anderson is Cree-Anishinaabe and grew up in the North End of Winnipeg. Her family roots go to\nPeguis First Nation and Norway House Cree Nation in Manitoba. She practices both Internal Medicine and\nPublic Health as a Medical Officer of Health with Indigenous Services Canada- Manitoba Region. She is the\nVice-Dean\, Indigenous Health\, Social Justice and Anti-Racism and the Executive Director of Indigenous\nAcademic Affairs in the Ongomiizwin Indigenous Institute of Health and Healing\, Rady Faculty of Health\nSciences\, University of Manitoba. She serves as the Chair of the Indigenous Health Network of the\nAssociation of Faculties of Medicine of Canada and the Chair of the National Consortium for Indigenous\nMedical Education. She was recognized for her contributions to Indigenous Peoples health with a National\nAboriginal Achievement Award in March 2011. In 2018 she was named one of the 100 most powerful women\nin Canada by the Women’s Executive Network. In 2021 she received the Royal College of Physicians and\nSurgeons Dr. Thomas Dignan Indigenous Health Award\, and in 2022 was named the Doctors Manitoba\nPhysician of the Year. \n  \nDr. Katrina Plamondon is an RN and Assistant Professor and Michael Smith Health Research BC Scholar at the School of Nursing at the University of British Columbia Okanagan. Her work as an equity scholar is grounded in critical anti-oppressive pedagogy and relational theory and practices. Her research focuses on critical questions about how to facilitate integration of equity-centred principles and practices across sectors and settings\, equipping people to engage in practices\, partnerships\, policy and society in ways that contribute to more equitable futures. She plays a national leadership role in advancing health equity. \n  \nPriscille-Nice Sanon is a sickle cell survivor. She was diagnosed with Sickle Cell type SS at birth. Due to complication to this disease\, she has received over 100 blood transfusion and a bone marrow transplant. She is involved in patient engagement and has a passion for health research. She graduated with a master degree in pharmaceutical science: pharmacoepidemiology from Université Laval. She was also involved with the Quebec SPOR unit as a patient coordinator for University Laval and collaborated on several research projects as a patient. Being a patient partner allowed her to put her passion for research and volunteering at work while being able to make a lasting impact on health research. \n  \nGarry Aslanyan: As Manager of Partnerships and Governance for the World Health Organization’s Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR)\, Dr Garry Aslanyan is responsible for TDR’s wide range of engagements with global health stakeholders\, including mobilizing programme resources and TDR’s governing bodies. TDR has a unique relationship with co-sponsors: UNICEF\, World Bank\, UNDP and WHO. This includes applying research evidence in global health programming of the co-sponsors and collaborating with six regional WHO offices which is overseen by Dr Aslanyan\, including the highly successful impact grants tackling public health challenges in those regions. In addition\, Dr Aslanyan is the Head of the ESSENCE on Health Research Secretariat that provides support to its Steering Committee and funding agencies which are members of ESSENCE to move forward on various activities. \nGarry is also the host of the highly popular Global Health Matters podcast and leads its production team. \nDr Aslanyan is Canadian\, with a background in dentistry\, public health\, research/innovation management\, health policy/systems as well as global health diplomacy. Prior to joining TDR\, Dr Aslanyan has taken on various roles that allowed him to lead various organizational and technical innovations and is a recognized leader in global public health. As well as holding senior executive positions within Canada’s federal government and as the past President of the Ontario Public Health Association\, Dr Garry Aslanyan has experiences living and working across the world including in Brazil\, South Africa\, Armenia\, Barbados and Vietnam. \n  \nDr. Jamie Brehaut is a Senior Scientist with the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute\, Full Professor in the School of Epidemiology & Public at the University of Ottawa\, and member of the Centre for Implementation Science and the Ottawa Methods Centre. Dr. Brehaut holds a PhD in Cognitive Psychology from McMaster University. Trained in issues of human memory\, attention\, and cognition\, Dr. Brehaut has expertise in knowledge translation and implementation\, psychological theory\, judgement and decision making\, decision support\, and issues in caregiver health. Much of his work focuses on the application of psychological theory to facilitate health care practice change and ethical issues in health care decision making. His work involves a wide range of clinical disciplines (e.g. emergency medicine\, critical care\, oncology\, lab medicine\, public health). \n  \nDr. Presseau is a Senior Scientist at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute and Associate Professor in the School of Epidemiology & Public Health and School of Psychology at the University of Ottawa. As a behavioural scientist\, he leads the Psychology and Health Research Group (PaHRG) and is a core faculty member of the Centre for Implementation Research at the Ottawa Hospital. He holds a Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Aberdeen (UK). His research program operates at the intersection between behavioural science and implementation science\, focusing on developing and evaluate interventions to support changing healthcare professional behaviours and health behaviours of patients and the public. \n  \nDr. Elton-Marshall is an Associate Professor in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa. Her research evaluates addiction and substance use-related policies and programs with the goal of providing the evidence needed to strengthen future policy and programming\, and ultimately reducing addiction and substance use problems. She is currently the Nominated Principal Investigator (NPI) on a CIHR funded team grant to evaluate the impact of cannabis policy in Ontario. \n  \n  \nDr. Melissa Brouwers is a Professor and the Director of the School of Epidemiology and Public Health (SEPH) in the Faculty of Medicine at University of Ottawa. She also holds appointments at McMaster University in the Department of Oncology and the Department of Health Research Methods\, Evidence and Impact (HEI). At SEPH\, Dr. Brouwers is a co-leader of the Knowledge Synthesis and Application Unit (https://www.ksau.ca/) and a co-lead of the AGREE Research Enterprise (www.agreetrust.com). Dr. Brouwers holds a wealth of experience as a health services researcher with special interest in knowledge translation\, implementation science and evaluation\, and knowledge synthesis and guidelines. She has a passion for graduate school education and international research collaborations. She obtained her PhD in Social Psychology from Western University. \n  \nDr. Brent Moloughney is the Deputy Medical Officer of Health at Ottawa Public Health where he leads a team of Associate Medical Officers of Health that proactively provides medical expertise and strengthens capacity for innovation and quality across the organization’s programs and services.\nBrent is a public health and preventive medicine specialist with over 25 years of experience at regional\, provincial and national levels. For 18 of those years\, he was an independent consultant working with public health organizations across the country. Prior to his return to Ottawa in early 2020\, Brent was based at Public Health Ontario where he was a Medical Director and then Interim Chief of the Department of Health Promotion\, Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention. Brent has clinical faculty positions at the University of Toronto and the University of Ottawa. \n  \nDr. Sameera Hussain is a global health policy expert working at the intersection of academia\, policy\, and practice. Her current work is focussed on transformation in the post-COVID19 context using systems approaches for effective\, evidence-based policy-making. She works at the Public Health Agency of Canada\, advancing strategic priorities for public health renewal. She is passionate about knowledge mobilization to bridge the evidence to policy gap in health systems. Dr. Hussain operates through a lens of intersectional feminism and social justice\, and is committed to the mentorship of early-career women scholars from racialized communities/global South who are working in health policy and systems research. She maintains an active research agenda around health equity\, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)\, structural determinants of health\, and whole-of-government approaches to health and well-being. \nDr. Hussain holds a doctorate in global public health and degrees in political and development studies. She serves on the editorial board of BMC’s Globalization and Health Journal\, where she recently spearheaded a special journal issue on health intersectoralism in the SDG era. She was recognized in 2020 on the Canadian Women in Global Health list. \n  \nDr Lynne Leonard is a social epidemiologist and Associate Professor and Research Scientist in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health. \nA social scientist by training\, Dr Leonard is particularly interested in the social determinants of health and in conducting community-based research to effect policy and programme change at the community\, provincial and national level. She obtained her PhD in social policy and epidemiology and biostatistics from McGill University focusing her work in the area of HIV prevention. \nAn active research investigator in the HIV/AIDS field for many years\, as Principal Investigator Dr Leonard has directed several collaborative studies in HIV prevention research at the national\, provincial and local level. In Ottawa\, her HIV prevention research began some thirteen years ago with the community evaluation of the Site Needle Exchange Programme and has continued to focus on working with women at higher risk of HIV and with women and men who inject drugs. She has directed the Ottawa site of the interprovincial SurvIDU project for over six years. The widely disseminated results of this study have generated substantial programme and policy developments in response to the documented situation of an extremely high level of HIV infection among Ottawa injection drug users. \nDr Leonard is currently Principal Investigator of two community-based cohort studies employing both qualitative and quantitative methods\, to more fully understand\, from the perspectives of injection drug users themselves\, the individual and structural factors contributing to the unacceptably high level of HIV and HCV infection among women and men in Ottawa who inject drugs. With the support of funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and as Principal Investigator she will continue her work with this community to assess the need for a safer injection facility in Ottawa. \nAs a firm proponent of of the necessity to transfer research into programme and policy reformulation and development\, Dr Leonard is a member of many national\, provincial and local committees and advisory boards focusing on policy and programme development to reduce the harm associated with injection drug use and serves as a member and Chair on a range of national and provincial Scientific Review Boards including the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. She has been nominated to the Ontario Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS and to the Ontario Provincial Working Group on Hepatitis C – both groups provide advice and guidance to the Provincial Minister of Health who is a member of both groups. \nDr Leonard holds competitive research funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research\, the Canadian Foundation for AIDS Research\, the Community-based Research Programme of the Canadian Strategy on HIV/AIDS and is a research scholar of the Ontario HIV Treatment Network. In 2002\, Dr Leonard received the New Investigator Award from the Canadian HIV/AIDS Research Association. \n  \nDr. Erin Cameron is an Associate Professor of Medical Education at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine University (NOSMU) in Thunder Bay\, Canada. As a mid-career educational scientist\, Dr. Cameron’s research focuses on social justice pedagogies and practices that support transformation of local education and health systems. With regional\, provincial\, and national funding\, Dr. Cameron’s work is interdisciplinary with broad impact and a community focus. She has over 50 peer-reviewed publications\, $4M funding; 140 conference presentations; and has worked with over 35 trainees.  \nIn addition to an active research program\, socially accountable leadership is at the heart of Dr. Cameron’s work. She is the inaugural Academic Director of the Centre for Social Accountability\, a multidisciplinary centre at NOSM U dedicated to the improvement of health and wellness in Northern Ontario. The Centre is home to two research networks MERLIN (the Medical Education Research Lab in the North) and NORTHH (Northern Ontario Towards Health Hub)\, and the International Steering Committee on Accreditation and Social Accountability\, a global think-tank for establishing standards around social accountability. Through strategic policy leadership and advocacy\, research and innovation\, and education\, the Centre is quickly becoming a frontrunner in the improvement of sustainable equity\, access\, and population health outcomes. As a social accountability leader in Canada\, Dr. Cameron is the Co-Chair of the Social Accountability Network within the Association of Faculties of Medicine in Canada (AFMC) and a member of the Standing Committee on Social Accountability in the AFMC.  \nPrior to joining NOSMU\, she held a faculty appointment at Memorial University of Newfoundland and enjoyed a varied career as a professional athlete and journalist. Erin loves living in Northern Ontario and enjoys vibrant outdoor adventures with her partner and four young children. \n  \nMichele Whiteduck is an Algonquin Anishinaabe Ikwe from Pikwakanagan  First Nation. \nShe graduated in 2014 from Lakehead University in Thunder bay ON from the Native Language Instructor’s Program. She is a certified Native language teacher and has worked in the education department for the Algonquins of Pikwakanagan first nation from 2009 to present date. Michele teaches Algonquin language and culture from kinder level to grade 8 in the elementary schools in Eganville ON. Michele has also facilitated adult Algonquin language classes\, drumming and singing and moccassin making within her community and Algonquin College at the Pembroke site. She enjoys sewing\, drumming and singing and taking part in traditional ceremonies. Michele is a mother to 6 children and a Grandmother to 14 Grandchildren\, She is very Family oriented  and enjoys spending time with family and building memories.  \n  \nAlison Bourgon has held various leadership positions during her twelve years at CIHR. In her current role\, she oversees the breadth of CIHR’s science policies and strategies\, including work in the areas of capacity development; ethics; equity\, diversity and inclusion; health research data; knowledge translation; open science; and research excellence. \n  \n  \n  Registration is now open for the 2023 KT Canada – SEPH Scientific Meeting! \n  \nCONFERENCE FEES \nRegular: $800 \nStudents & Fellows: $450 \nOnline only: $235 \nPatients and Caregivers: Please contact Meghan directly: Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to \nThe deadline to register is Monday\, May 8th. \nRegister HERE \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. \n  \nYou must book your room by April 11th in order to receive the conference room rate. If you run into any issues while making your reservation\, please email Meghan.Storey@UnityHealth.to. \nThe KT Canada – SEPH Scientific Meeting is being held at the Delta Hotel at 101 Lyon St. North\, Ottawa\, on May 11-12\, 2023. \nHotel website: click here\nHotel Address: 101 Lyon St. North\, Ottawa\, Ontario\nPhone: +1 613-237-3600   \nDownload agenda here\n  \nSci Mtg 2023_Agenda_April 11Coming soon Oral Presentations  \nOral presenters will get 15 minutes total – this includes 10 minutes of presenting and 5 minutes of Q&A. If the presentation goes longer than 10 minutes\, the Q&A will be shortened. Oral presenters should send their slides to Meghan Storey by May 1st. \nPoster Presentations  \n\nThe poster board surface is 91” wide\, and 45” tall.\nIn terms of poster format – we do not have requirements\, but we have included some resources below:\nHow to create a better research poster in less time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SYk29tnxASs\nTemplates: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SYk29tnxASs\nPoster presenters will get 30 seconds to introduce their work to the full group. Please prepare 1 slide for this and send to Meghan Storey by May 1st. You can send the slide in PDF or PPT format. There will be 40 posters total.
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-scientific-meeting-2023/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220616
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220722
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20211116T164241Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220521T165942Z
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
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://ktcanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/KTcanada_logo_retina.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220504
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220507
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
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:20210624
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210813
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
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
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:20260415T111232
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:20200617
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200620
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20191204T013047Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200318T125030Z
UID:5121-1592352000-1592611199@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:Summer Institute 2020
DESCRIPTION:Given 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.\n2020 KT Canada Summer Institute\n \n  \n InformationSpeakersApplyAgendaSponsorsGiven 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. \nWe are pleased to announce the Knowledge Translation (KT) Canada Summer Institute to be held in Ottawa from June 17-19\, 2020. The 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 2020 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.  We encourage applications from a wide range of disciplines that span all of CIHR’s research themes (clinical\, health services\, and population health). \n  \nCosts: \nTrainee & fellow registration: $375 \nJunior Faculty registration: $925 \n  \nParticipants are responsible for covering their own travel and accommodation.  We have secured a group rate for accommodations.  Some meals will be covered by KT Canada during the event: \n1st day: breaks \n2nd day: breakfast\, lunch\, breaks \n3rd day: breakfast\, lunch\, breaks \n  \n Dr. 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\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\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\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. \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\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\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.  \nThe application deadline has been extended to Monday\, March 9th\, 11:59PM EST. Apply now. \n    \nYou may find a draft version of the agenda here. \n    \nThank you to our sponsors
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/summer-institute-2020/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200506
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200508
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
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:20190626
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190629
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20181218T174218Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190606T235327Z
UID:4150-1561507200-1561766399@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:Summer Institute 2019
DESCRIPTION:  \n2019 KT Canada Summer Institute\n\n InformationSpeakersApplyAgendaSponsors  \nWe are pleased to announce the Knowledge Translation (KT) Canada Summer Institute to be held in Toronto from June 26 – 28\, 2019.  The 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 chance to network with colleagues including national and international KT experts. \n  \nThe theme of the 2019 Institute is: “Evaluations in 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.  We encourage applications  from a wide range of disciplines that span all of CIHR’s research themes (clinical\, health services\, and population health). \n  \nCosts:\nTrainee registration: $350 \nJunior Faculty registration: $900 \n  \nParticipants are responsible for covering their own travel and accommodation.  We have secured a group rate at a nearby hotel.  Some meals will be covered by KT Canada during the event: \n\n1st day: breaks\n2nd day: all meals (breakfast\, lunch\, group dinner\, breaks)\n3rd day: breakfast\, lunch and all breaks\n\n  \n Guest Speakers\n\n \nDr. Andrea Tricco\nAndrea Tricco completed a MSc in Epidemiology (2002-2004) and a PhD in Population Health (2005-2009). She is a Scientist in the Knowledge Translation Program of the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute\, St. Michael’s Hospital (appointed Sept 2011) and directs the Knowledge Synthesis Team. She is an Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health (appointed June 2014). Her research interests are related to responding to decision-makers (including policy-makers\, healthcare providers\, and patients) through knowledge synthesis. Her research also focuses on advancing the science of knowledge synthesis and she is leading research projects related to rapid reviews\, network meta-analysis\, and scoping reviews. \nDr. Tricco has published over 135 peer-reviewed articles. She currently holds a Tier 2 Canada Research Chair in Knowledge Synthesis and the Ontario Ministry of Research\, Innovation\, and Science Early Researcher Award. She is an Associate Editor for the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology\, BMC Medical Research Methodology\, and Systematic Reviews; and sits on the editorial board for the BMC Medicine. She developed an online systematic review course that >335 students have completed\, which is offered through the University of Toronto. \nA sample of Dr. Tricco’s publications can be found here. \n  \nDr. Anne Sales\nDr. Sales is a Professor and the Associate Chair for Educational Programs and Health System Innovation in the Department of Learning Health Sciences\, University of Michigan Medical School. 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 current 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\, and the role of social networks in uptake of evidence based practices and implementation interventions. She has completed over 30 funded research projects\, including a Partnered Evaluation Initiative funded by the VA Office of Nursing Services\, evaluating the implementation and effectiveness of VA national nursing initiatives\, and currently leads a VA Quality Enhancement Research Initiative Program focused on implementing goals of care conversations in VA long term care settings. She is co-Editor-in-Chief of Implementation Science\, together with Michel Wensing of Heidelberg University in Germany. A full bibliography is available at https://www-ncbi-nlm-nih-gov.proxy.lib.umich.edu/sites/myncbi/1dmFRRPeGbU55/bibliography/47758073/public/?sort=date&direction=descending. \n  \n \nDr. David Johnson\nDr. David Johnson is Senior Medical Director for the Alberta Health Services Maternal\, Neonatal\, Child and Youth Strategic Clinical Network; a pediatric emergency physician and medical toxicologist; and a Professor of Pediatrics\, Emergency Medicine\, and Physiology and Pharmacology in the Cummings School of Medicine\, University of Calgary. His research interests are primarily focused on the management of common childhood respiratory emergencies\, and ensuring primary health care professionals utilize ‘best evidence’ in managing these diseases. \n  \nDr. Janet Curran\nDr. Janet Curran is an Associate Professor in the School of Nursing and the Department of Emergency Medicine in the Faculty of Medicine at Dalhousie University. She is Co-Director of the Aligning Health Needs and Evidence for Transformative Change: Joanna Briggs Centre at the School of Nursing and she also holds a scientific appointment in pediatrics and emergency medicine at the IWK Health Centre. Dr. Curran’s program of research is focused on developing and evaluating interventions to improve transitions in care for children and their families/caregivers. She is the 2015 recipient of the Pediatric Emergency Research Canada (PERC) Terry Klassen Young Investigator Award and the Dalhousie University Faculty of Health Professions Early Career Research Excellence Award. Dr. Curran’s program of research is supported by a CIHR New Investigator Award in Knowledge Translation and her research is directly informed by the inclusion of multiple stakeholders (patients\, caregivers\, clinicians\, and administrators). Dr. Curran currently leads a CIHR-NSHRF funded multi-centred national study exploring best practice strategies for discharge communication in paediatric emergency practice settings. \n  \n \nMs. Jess Rogers\nOver the course of Jess’ career\, she has built strong executive experience in leading effective teams\, strategic planning and implementing operational policies and processes for organizations with a core mandate to design and execute knowledge translation activities. Prior to her current role as Manager of Knowledge Mobilization Strategy at the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer\, Jess lead the efforts at the Centre for Effective Practice for 10 years to develop appropriate methodologies for developing and adapting evidence-based clinical guidance for health care professionals. As the Director at CEP\, she was also responsible for supporting diverse clients to tailor implementation approaches for various small and large scale projects ranging from Ontario’s provincial education approach to low back pain care to developing a Pan-Canadian Strategy for the development and dissemination of clinical guidance during a Pandemic. She also lead the first Academic Detailing/Educational Outreach programs funded by the Ontario Government in both primary care and long term care. \n  \nDr. Linda Li\nDr. Linda Li is Professor and Harold Robinson / Arthritis Society Chair at the Department of Physical Therapy\, University of British Columbia\, and Senior Scientist at Arthritis Research Canada. She holds a Canada Research Chair in Patient-oriented Knowledge Translation\, and is currently the Lead of the Knowledge Translation Methods Cluster of the BC SUPPORT Unit. Dr. Li’s research focuses on the help-seeking experience of people with arthritis. She evaluates the use of e-health tools in patient care and self-management. Recently\, her work has expanded to studying the benefits of engaging patients and the public in health research. \n  \nDr. Michelle Kho\nDr. Michelle Kho is an Associate Professor in the School of Rehabilitation Science at McMaster University in Hamilton\, Canada. \nAs a clinician-scientist\, she also cares for patients in the St. Joseph’s Healthcare ICU in Hamilton.  She holds a Tier II Canada Research Chair in Critical Care Rehabilitation and Knowledge Translation. \nDr. Kho is leading a clinical research program of very early in-bed cycling in mechanically ventilated patients to improve patient outcomes.  Her research interests include novel early rehabilitation strategies to reduce weakness in ICU patients\, knowledge translation\, research methodology (systematic reviews\, practice guidelines)\, and health services and outcomes research. \n  \nDr. Monika Kastner\nMonika Kastner is the Research Chair in KT and Implementation at North York General Hospital\, affiliate Scientist with the KT Program at the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael’s Hospital\, and Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto. Monika’s research interests and goals are to make a positive impact on the health of older adults with the use of innovative eHealth technologies\, and to advance the science and practice of KT and health services research. Currently\, Monika is creating an eHealth application (KeepWell) that responds to the needs of older adults with multimorbidity and empowers them to make lifestyle changes to keep well. \n\n  \nDr. Sharon Straus\nSharon E. Straus is a geriatrician and clinical epidemiologist who trained at the University of Toronto and the University of Oxford. She is the Director of the Knowledge Translation Program and Interim Physician-in-Chief\, St. Michael’s Hospital; Director\, Division of Geriatric Medicine\, University of Toronto; Vice Chair\, and Professor\, Department of Medicine\, University of Toronto. She holds a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Knowledge Translation and Quality of Care and has authored more than 400 publications and 3 textbooks in evidence-based medicine\, knowledge translation and mentorship. She is in the top 1% of highly cited clinical researchers as per Web of Science. She holds more than $57 million in peer reviewed research grants as a principal investigator. She has received national awards for mentorship\, research and education. \n  \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. \n  Applications for 2019 are now open.  The application deadline has been extended to Friday\, March 15th\, 10am EST. \nApply NowYou may view the draft agenda here. \n  \n \n  \n \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/summer-institute-2019/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ktcanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/st-michaels-education-shuterstbridge.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190530
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190601
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20180817T165126Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191010T143849Z
UID:3708-1559174400-1559347199@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:KT Canada Scientific Meeting 2019
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \n \n  \nConference InformationGuest SpeakersRegistration & Hotel BookingSubmit an abstractAgendaProgramSponsors \nThe 2019 KT Canada Annual Scientific Meeting is being held on May 30th and 31st in Winnipeg\, Manitoba at the Delta Hotel. \nThe theme is ‘Advancing the science of integrated knowledge translation’ \nWe will be posting additional information as it becomes available. For questions please contact Meghan Storey: storeym@smh.ca. \n  \nAdditional Information\nWorkshop Materials: Activity Booklet and Resource Booklet \nFloor Plan: Delta Winnipeg \nOpening Ceremony \n  \n\nKeynotes:\nDr. Anita Kothari\, Western University \nAnita Kothari is an Associate Professor in the School of Health Studies at the University of Western Ontario. Her research focuses on understanding how to best support the use of research and knowledge in healthcare decision-making; within this domain\, she concentrates on integrated knowledge translation (i.e.\, research co-production) particularly in public health systems and services. Her academic background involved training in health research methodology\, population health\, and health policy and services. She is a member of the College of the Royal Society of Canada. \n  \n  \nDr. Ian Graham\, University of Ottawa \nIan Graham\, PhD\, FCAHS\, FNYAM\, FRSC is a Professor in the School of Epidemiology and Public Health at the University of Ottawa and a Senior Scientist at the Centre for Practice-Changing Research at the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute. From 2006 to 2012 he was seconded to the position of Vice President of Knowledge Translation at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. His research program focuses on understanding how engaging patients and other stakeholders in the research process (known as integrated knowledge translation) works and the impact it produces. He is co-originator of the Ottawa Model of Research Use; the Practice Guideline Evaluation and Adaptation Cycle; the Knowledge to Action framework; and a founding member of the international ADAPTE collaboration. \n  \nPanelists:\nDr. Ahmed Abou-Setta\, University of Manitoba \nDr. Abou-Setta is Director of Knowledge Synthesis\, George and Fay Yee Centre for Healthcare Innovation (University of Manitoba) and Manitoba SPOR SUPPORT Unit. He leads and supports patient-oriented research including clinical practice guidelines\, systematic reviews\, and overviews of reviews. His work has been featured in JAMA\, BMJ\, CMAJ\, Annals of Internal Medicine\, Cochrane and WHO publications. In addition\, Dr. Abou-Setta is leading innovative research into methods for improving and streamlining the systematic review process. Furthermore\, Dr. Abou-Setta is regularly involved in training of students and clinical professionals through an array of consultations\, teaching\, and collaborative research on knowledge synthesis projects. \n  \nCarolyn Shimmin\, University of Manitoba \nCarolyn Shimmin is the Patient and Public Engagement Lead at the George and Fay Yee Centre for Healthcare Innovation (CHI)\, Manitoba’s SPOR SUPPORT Unit. In this role\, she is responsible for all patient/public engagement in health research programs and services offered at the Centre\, including the PE Lunchtime Learning Series\, the PE Champions Program\, the Funding Award to Support Patient/Public Engagement in Health Research\, and the CHI Patient Engagement Collaborative Partnership. With a bachelor’s degree combined honours in journalism and political science and a masters degree in gender studies\, Carolyn is a big proponent of using a social justice and health equity lens in patient/public engagement and writes and speaks about the importance of incorporating a trauma-informed intersectional analysis in order to build truly inclusive and safe spaces within patient and public engagement in health research. \n  \nDr. Charmayne Dubé\, University of Manitoba \nDr. Charmayne Dubé has been employed in the field of intellectual disabilities for 30 years and continues to be passionate about improving quality of services and ultimately\, quality of life for individuals who are supported in the community. She is the Senior Director of Resource Services within New Directions\, a non-profit organization\, and an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Occupational Therapy\, College of Rehabilitation Sciences in Manitoba. \nDr. Dubé completed an undergraduate degree in Medical Rehabilitation (Occupational Therapy)\, a Master of Science (Family Social Sciences) degree\, and her Doctoral program in Applied Health Sciences through the University of Manitoba. \n  \nDr. David Johnson\, University of Calgary \nDr. David Johnson is: Senior Medical Director for the Alberta Health Services Maternal\, Neonatal\, Child and Youth Strategic Clinical Network; a pediatric emergency physician and medical toxicologist; and a Professor of Pediatrics\, Emergency Medicine\, and Physiology and Pharmacology in the Cummings School of Medicine\, University of Calgary. His research interests are primarily focused on the management of common childhood respiratory emergencies\, and ensuring primary health care professionals utilize ‘best evidence’ in managing these diseases. \n  \nDr. Joyce Dogba\, Laval University \nDr. Joyce Dogba is trained as a physician in Togo. She holds a Master degree in health economics and a PhD in Public Health. She is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Family and Emergency Medicine at Laval University. Her research agenda comprises evaluation of collaborative practices with patients-users in research and the education of health professionals. She is also interested in advancing stakeholders engagement science regarding how to meaningfully involve the underserved including immigrants in patient-oriented research. Joyce Dogba is a co-lead on patient engagement within the SRAP/SPOR Network in Diabetes and Related Complications. \n  \nDr. Michelle Driedger\, University of Manitoba \nS. Michelle Driedger is a Professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences at the University of Manitoba and a proud member of the Manitoba Metis nation. Her broad areas of research interests include risk communication in primary care and public health\, risk perception\, and knowledge translation under conditions of uncertainty. Drawing primarily on qualitative and participatory methods\, she is particularly interested in how risk communicators can meaningfully engage public audiences to enable informed decisions about health recommendations\, including protective behaviours\, that can be adopted for themselves and their family.  Her research explores these aspects with both general population and Metis contexts. She has some current funded studies looking at vaccine hesitancy\, health priorities of Indigenous youth\, and patient-provider communication around non-recommended tests and procedures \n  \nDr. Julianne Sanguins \nJulianne Sanguins is the Research Program Manager in the Health & Wellness Department at the Manitoba Metis Federation\, an Assistant Professor in the University of Manitoba’s Department of Community Health Sciences\, and an Adjunct Scientist with the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy. Julianne is an RN and holds a PhD in Nursing.  The Research Program Manager with the Manitoba Metis Federation-Health & Wellness Department (MMF-HWD) since 2006\, she has been involved in numerous studies in which the aim has been to develop knowledge of the health of Metis in Manitoba.  As part of a dedicated team of researchers\, they conducted the first population-based provincial study that compared the health of Metis to all others Manitobans.  The two-year study (known as the Metis Atlas) was funded by Manitoba Health and was published in June 2010.  As a result of that study provincial chronic disease surveillance program of the Metis population was launched.  The Metis Atlas has also identified new areas of research and several qualitative and quantitative studies have been completed.  Moreover\, the study provided quantitative evidence for health policy planning and program adaptation. She continues to work with the Manitoba Metis Federation Health & Wellness Department managing all aspects of the academic needs of studies\, including directly supervising research staff. \n  \nThomas Beaudry\, Collaborator – Patient/Caregiver in Patient Engagement & Knowledge Translation; George & Fay Yee\, Centre for Healthcare Innovation \nResiding in Winnipeg\, Manitoba\, a proud Indigenous man; a proud father of three\, two young men and a young woman\, and a mishoom of 2 boys. A graduate of the Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources (CIER)\, with a certificate in Environmental Protection\, with the focus on environmental-related issues concerning Indigenous peoples and communities. \nHealth of the land is inseparable from the health of the people and vice versa. A healthy environment\, such as water\, ensures healthy people.  \nA goal of his is the collaboration between environmental and healthcare fields\, by being a “bridge\,” a facilitator in these fields and with Indigenous people in order to assist with creating a way for healthy people and communities. \n  \nMargo Powell\, Abilities Manitoba \nIn March 2015\, Margo Powell assumed the role of Executive Director at Abilities Manitoba. \nMargo began working in the disability sector in the early 1990’s. She has worked for small and large community organizations both in Winnipeg and rurally. Her experience also includes running a provincial organization. \nMargo is a proud alumni of the Disability and Community Support Program at RRC and has her degree in Community Rehabilitation and Disability Studies from the University of Calgary. Her experience also includes teaching the Foundations Course for RRC and sitting on the original Staffing Stabilization Committee. She was also the community representative on the MDC transition team 10 years ago and has taught Vulnerable Person’s Act training. Margo is passionate about inclusion\, equality\, community living and quality of life. \n  Registration is now open for the 2019 KT Canada Scientific Meeting!\n  \nFees\nRegular:  $650 \nStudents & Fellows:  $350 \nPatients and Caregivers: Please contact Meghan directly: StoreyM@smh.ca \nThe deadline to register is May 27th. \n  \nRegister here:  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/kt-canada-scientific-meeting-2019-tickets-54718234713 \n  \nVenue/ Hotel Information\nYou may book a room at the Delta Hotel by Marriott by using this link. \n  \nPlease note that you must use the above link in order to get the conference room rate. \n  \nYou must book your room before April 30th in order to receive the conference room rate.  If you receive a message of “No availability” – please call the toll-free number\, 1-844-294-7309\, to speak with a reservation agent\, who should be able to help accommodate. \n  \nThe KT Canada Scientific Meeting is being held at the Delta Hotel by Marriott on the 30-31 of May 2019. \n  \nHotel website: Delta Hotel by Marriott \nHotel Address: 350 St Mary Avenue\, Winnipeg R3C 3J2 Canada \nPhone: 1 204-942-0551 \n  \n‘Whether traveling for leisure or business\, Delta Hotels Winnipeg ensures your desires are accommodated for.  With a location in the heart of downtown and a connection to the city’s skybridge\, out hotel makes it easy to access RBC Convention Centre and BellMTS Place.  Spend time shopping at Polo Park\, or feed your love of the arts at the Royal Winnipeg Ballet.  End your day of adventures in our rooms and suites boasting pillowtop beds.  The balance of work and play is perfected with our free high-speed Wi-Fi\, wall-mounted TVs and large ergonomic desks.  In the morning\, be sure to visit Urban Bean\, our coffeehouse featuring Starbucks® drinks.  Savour a healthy\, hearty meal and cocktail at Blaze Restaurant & Lounge.  In your free time\, work out at our Odyssey Fitness Center with cardio equipment\, enjoy a scenic swim in our rooftop pool or make a splash any time of the year at our indoor pool.  Visit Manitoba’s capital city for work or fun and let Delta Hotels Winnipeg exceed your expectations every season.’ \n  \nOther hotels in the area: The Alt Hotel and the Radisson are alternate options which are walking distance to the Delta. \nAlt hotel: https://www.althotels.com/en/winnipeg/ \nRadisson: https://www.radisson.com/winnipeg-hotel-mb-r3c0b8/mbwinnip?s_cid=os.amer-ca-rad-MBWINNIP-gmb \nThe Fairmont and Fort Garry are also not too far away: \nFairmont: https://www.fairmont.com/winnipeg/ \nFort Garry: https://www.fortgarryhotel.com/ \n  \n  \nAccessibility\nFor more information\, please call the general manager of the hotel: +1 204-942-0551 \n  \nAccessible guest rooms have 32 inch wide opening \nAdjustable height hand-held shower wand \nBathroom vanity in guest rooms for lower heights \nBathtub grab bars \nBathtub seat \nClosed-caption TV \nFlashing door knocker available \nGrab bars in bathroom \nHotel has on site accessible self-parking \nLowered electrical outlets \n*No transfer showers available \nRoute to accessible guest rooms is accessible \nSelf-operating lifts or sloped entry \nService animals allowed for persons with disabilities \nTTY/TTD compatible \nTelephone for hearing impaired \nToilet seat in guest rooms \nRoll-in shower \n  \nRoom Cancellation Policy\nGuests have 48 hours prior to arrival date to cancel or make any changes to their reservation without penalty to their credit card.  Should they not cancel and not arrive\, then 1st nights room and taxes will be billed to their credit card number as a no show charge. \n  \nCatering\nBreakfast and lunch as well as snacks and refreshments during breaks are provided for all attendees on 30-31 May. \n  \nParking\nOff-site parking\, fee: 20 CAD daily \nOn-site parking\, fee: 18 CAD daily \nValet parking\, fee: 24 CAD daily \nOnsite garage clearance 1.8 meters-contact hotel for large vehicle options/Offsite parking at RBC Convention Centre. \n  Abstract submission is now closed. The agenda for the Scientific Meeting can be found here. \n  The full program can be found here.   \n  \n  \n  \n \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/kt-canada-scientific-meeting-2019/
LOCATION:Winnipeg\, Manitoba
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ktcanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/KTCanadaScientificMeeting.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180627
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180630
DTSTAMP:20260415T111232
CREATED:20171221T164302Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180327T123955Z
UID:2761-1530057600-1530316799@ktcanada.org
SUMMARY:Summer Institute 2018
DESCRIPTION:2018 KT Canada Summer Institute\n InformationSpeakersApplyAgendaSponsorsWe are pleased to announce the Knowledge Translation (KT) Canada Summer Institute to be held in Toronto from June 27 – 29\, 2018.  The 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 chance to network with colleagues including national and international KT experts. \n  \nThe theme of the 2018 Institute is: “KT Interventions”. \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.  We encourage applications  from a wide range of disciplines that span all of CIHR’s research themes (clinical\, health services\, and population health). \n Guest Speakers\nDr. Melissa Brouwers\nDr. Melissa Brouwers is a Professor and Lead of Health Services Research in the Department of Oncology\, McMaster University; Deputy Director and Scientist\,  Escarpment Cancer Research Institute\, McMaster University; associate member in the Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics\, McMaster University and the Provincial Director (Scientific) of the Program in Evidence-based Care (PEBC)\, Cancer Care Ontario (CCO). \nShe holds a PhD in Psychology from the University of Western Ontario.  Melissa is an active and leading member of various national and international health services research groups with a special focus on practice guidelines including the Principal Investigator of the AGREE Enterprise – a research program aimed to improve the quality and implementability of guidelines; the Knowledge Translation Lead of the CanIMPACT project – a national program of research aimed to improve outcomes for people affected by cancer; and a member of the KT-NET Advisory Committee of the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (OICR).  She is also the McMaster University co-lead for the National KT-STIHR (Strategic Training Initiative in Health Research) grant and a member of KT Canada. \n  \nDr. Heather Colquhoun\nHeather Colquhoun\, PhD\, OT Reg. (Ont.) is an Assistant Professor in the Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy Department at the University of Toronto. She has over 29 years of experience as an Occupational Therapist and researcher.  Her research focuses on the science of knowledge translation (KT). In particular\, the identification\, prioritization and closing of evidence-to-practice gaps in healthcare. \n  \nDr. Janet Curran\nDr. Janet Curran is an Associate Professor in the School of Nursing and the Department of Emergency Medicine in the Faculty of Medicine at Dalhousie University. She is Co-Director of the Aligning Health Needs and Evidence for Transformative Change: Joanna Briggs Centre at the School of Nursing and she also holds a scientific appointment in pediatrics and emergency medicine at the IWK Health Centre. Dr. Curran’s program of research is focused on developing and evaluating interventions to improve transitions in care for children and their families/caregivers. She is the 2015 recipient of the Pediatric Emergency Research Canada (PERC) Terry Klassen Young Investigator Award and the Dalhousie University Faculty of Health Professions Early Career Research Excellence Award. Dr. Curran’s program of research is supported by a CIHR New Investigator Award in Knowledge Translation and her research is directly informed by the inclusion of multiple stakeholders (patients\, caregivers\, clinicians\, and administrators). Dr. Curran currently leads a CIHR-NSHRF funded multi-centred national study exploring best practice strategies for discharge communication in paediatric emergency practice settings. \n  \nDr. Sophie Desroches\nDr Sophie Desroches\, PhD\, RD\, is an Associate Professor at the School of Nutrition of Laval University\, in Quebec City\, Canada. She is also a research scientist at the Institute of Nutrition and Functional Foods of Laval University. Her research program aims to identify\, develop and evaluate knowledge translation strategies that will optimize adherence to dietary advice. She is the lead author of the Cochrane systematic review “Interventions for enhancing adherence to dietary advice for preventing and managing chronic diseases”. Her more recently funded research projects have explored the use of social media\, and more specifically blogs\, as knowledge translation strategies to enhance adherence to evidence-based dietary advice for preventing and managing chronic diseases. \n  \nDr. David Johnson\nDr. David Johnson is: Senior Medical Director for the Alberta Health Services Maternal\, Neonatal\, Child and Youth Strategic Clinical Network; a pediatric emergency physician and medical toxicologist; and a Professor of Pediatrics\, Emergency Medicine\, and Physiology and Pharmacology in the Cummings School of Medicine\, University of Calgary. His research interests are primarily focused on the management of common childhood respiratory emergencies\, and ensuring primary health care professionals utilize ‘best evidence’ in managing these diseases. \n  \nDr. Krystina Lewis\nKrystina B. Lewis is a cardiovascular nurse and PhD candidate in Nursing program at the University of Ottawa. She will commence a position as Assistant Professor in the School of Nursing\, Faculty of Health Sciences at the University of Ottawa in July 2018. Her doctoral studies focused on the design\, development\, and preliminary evaluation of a decision support intervention for patients facing implantable cardioverter-defibrillator replacement. Using an integrated knowledge translation approach\, patients\, family members\, and healthcare professionals as knowledge users were engaged as research partners in the research process\, including development of the decision support intervention. \n  \nDr. Julia Moore\nDr. Julia E. Moore leads the Team for Implementation\, Evaluation and Sustainability (TIES) at the Knowledge Translation (KT) Program in the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute of St. Michael’s Hospital. Dr. Moore has coordinated or managed over 65 grants and contracts about applying KT in health care\, education\, and mental health. She manages a team of 20 research coordinators and research assistants. She holds a PhD from the Pennsylvania State University in Human Development\, where she focused on the implementation of preventive interventions. \n  \nDr. Byron Powell\nByron J. Powell is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Gillings School of Global Public Health and a Research Fellow at the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research and the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His research and scholarship focuses on 1) identifying contextual determinants of implementing evidence-based practices in routine care; 2) identifying\, selecting\, and tailoring implementation strategies to address determinants of effective implementation; and 3) advancing research methodology in implementation science. \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. 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 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  \nMs. Andrea Proctor\nPrior to joining the Vector Institute as the Director of Health Care Engagement in July 2017\, Andrea was a manager in the Research\, Analysis and Evaluation Branch in the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care where she worked to ensure that the development of provincial programs and policies was informed by evidence. She played a key role in the development of the Ontario Health Innovation Council’s final report\, and helped to establish the office of the Chief Health Innovation Strategist. Andrea holds a PhD in Psychology from Northwestern University\, with a concentration in cognitive psychology and psycholinguistics. \n  \n  \nDr. Laura Weeks\nDr. Laura Weeks is a methodologist and evidence synthesis expert with over ten years’ experience acquired through her work with academia\, CADTH\, AHRQ and the Cochrane Collaboration. She currently manages a team of health technology assessment methodologists at CADTH\, Canada’s pan-Canadian Health Technology Assessment agency. With her team she develops\, supports and promotes the use of high-quality scientific methods across all health technology assessments\, in addition to strategies to enhance uptake of assessment results. Her specific methodological interests include clinical systematic reviews\, health technology assessments\, rapid reviews\, qualitative research\, and patient engagement. Laura obtained her PhD in Community Health Sciences from the University of Calgary in 2009. \n\nMr. Mike Campo\nDr. Monika Kastner\nDr. Janet Squires\nDr. Linda Li\n    \nApplications for 2018 are now closed. Many thanks to all who applied!\nThe draft agenda is available here.\n  A huge thank you to our sponsors who are helping make this event possible.\nGold Level \n \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nSilver Level \n \n  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://ktcanada.org/event/summer-institute-2018/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://ktcanada.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/KT-Canada_KT-Summer-Institute_2017_v3.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR