Canada invests more than $4.7M to give next generation of health researchers hands-on experience tackling health system challenges

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

The Government of Canada continues to invest in our country's brightest minds to bring innovative perspectives to our health care system.

Today, the Honourable Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Health announced a total investment of over $4.7M in the Health System Impact (HSI) Fellowship program, which provides talented PhD trainees and postdoctoral researchers a unique opportunity to work directly within health organizations to tackle real-world health system challenges.

This funding will support 18 PhD students and 25 postdoctoral fellows who are embedded in 30 health organizations and connected to 16 universities. Their research spans a wide range of health care priorities, from improving transitions in care and supporting the wellbeing of our health workforce to improving health care in rural areas and innovating long-term care. Their work will help us to continue improving the delivery of equitable health care in Canada.

These are a few of the 2022 HSI Fellows:

  • Raegan Mazurka, Postdoctoral Fellow (Dalhousie University), is collaborating with Nova Scotia Health to harness health system data to optimize outcomes for depression in Nova Scotia.
  • Orphée Tamba, PhD Fellow (University of British Columbia), is working with the B.C. Ministry of Health to reduce early childhood inequities in British Columbia by establishing a sustainable process for ongoing collaboration between government ministries, health research organizations and systems delivery partners.
  • Faizan Khan, Postdoctoral Fellow (University of Calgary), is carrying out a project with Alberta Health Services' Critical Care Strategic Clinical Network that aims to improve care and health outcomes for critically ill patients transitioning from the intensive care unit.
  • Corentin Montiel, PhD Fellow (Université du Québec à Montréal) is working with the Centre of Excellence on Partnership with Patients and the Public to develop and mobilize patient knowledge before and during their trajectory of care.
  • Allison H. MacNeil, PhD Fellow (McGill University), is leading a project with the Centre intégré universitaire de santé et services sociaux de l'Ouest-de-l'Île-de-Montréal that will help drive youth mental health systems transformation through grounded evidence gathering, collaborative stakeholder engagement, and effective strategic planning.
  • Valentina Antonipillai, Postdoctoral Fellow (McMaster University), is collaborating with research teams at McMaster University and Statistics Canada to analyze data on long-term care workers and engage stakeholders to strengthen the evidence base and help guide policy reform in long-term care.

Funding for these recipients is provided by the Canadian Institute of Health Research, Fonds de recherche du Québec - Santé, Michael Smith Health Research BC, Mitacs, the Saskatchewan Health Research Foundation, and 30 health organizations across Canada.

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