脡惫茅苍别尘别苍迟蝉 de 2024
Veuillez noter que seuls certains de nos 茅v茅nements pass茅s sont r茅pertori茅s en fran莽ais.
The 平特五不中-UofT Wellbeing Research Seminar Series is co-organized by Dr. Felix Cheung (University of Toronto) and Sofia Panasiuk (University of Toronto), Anthony McCanny (University of Toronto), and Dr. Chris Barrington-Leigh (平特五不中). The seminar series is open to all and will be held online via Zoom.
Registration for this series/any talk听is required in advanced, but is free.
Schedule Autumn 2024
Date/Time - October 8th (12 pm ET)
Speaker: Kelsey O鈥機onnor
Title: Evidence for the Easterlin Paradox
Date/Time -听November 12th (12 pm ET)
厂辫别补办别谤:听Claudia Senik
罢颈迟濒别:听Is it possible to raise national happiness?
罢丑别听颁搁脡听is pleased to invite you to a book roundtable on Jonathan Birch鈥檚听听(Oxford University Press, 2024).
November 8, 2024 -16h00-17h30
School of Population and Global Health
平特五不中
2001 平特五不中 College Ave.
12th floor, room 1201
Speakers:
Jonathan Birch (London School of Economics)
Stevan Harnard (Universit茅 du Qu茅bec 脿 Montr茅al)
Jonathan Kimmelman (平特五不中)
Martin Gibert听(Universit茅 de Montr茅al/颁搁脡)
颁丑补颈谤:听Virginie Simoneau-Gilbert听(University of Oxford)
Book summary:
Can octopuses feel pain and pleasure? What about crabs, shrimps, insects or spiders? How do we tell whether a person unresponsive after severe brain injury might be suffering? When does a fetus in the womb start to have conscious experiences? Could there even be rudimentary feelings in miniature models of the human brain, grown from human stem cells? What about AI?
These are questions about the edge of sentience, and they are subject to enormous, disorienting uncertainty. The stakes are immense, and neglecting the risks can have terrible costs. We need to err on the side of caution, yet it鈥檚 often far from clear what 鈥榚rring on the side of caution鈥 should mean in practice. When are we going too far? When are we not doing enough?
罢丑别听Edge of Sentience听presents a precautionary framework designed to help us reach ethically sound, evidence-based decisions despite our uncertainty.
Making road safety moral 鈥 a brief history of arguing about seatbelts, helmets, and drunk-driving in Britain
October 17th, 2024 from 12h00-13h00 EST
Hybrid听 - Room 1140 2001 平特五不中 College, 11th floor or on ZOOM
Speaker:
Janet Weston is an Associate Professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and Director of the LSHTM Centre for History in Public Health. Her research interests include histories of psychiatry and mental health, HIV/AIDS, prison healthcare, and health law, and her most recent book Looking after Miss Alexander: care, mental capacity, and the Court of Protection in mid-twentieth-century England came out last year with 平特五不中-Queens University Press and received the 2024 J. Willard Hurst prize honorable mention. Her current research, funded by the Wellcome Trust, explores twentieth century public health law in Britain and also aims to develop better connections between the humanities and public health.
Abstract:
In this talk, Professor Westin will discuss how and why road safety came to be seen as a 鈥榩ublic health鈥 issue in Britain from the 1960s onwards, and the associated battle that took place concerning the morality of legislating about seatbelts, motorcycle helmets, and drunk-driving. The debates surrounding these innovations make up a valuable case study that demonstrates the role of morality within public health. As she will show, processes of moralization in relation to road safety were operating in several different ways: in the identification of the 鈥榩ublic health problem;鈥 in the framing of opposition to new legislation on the basis of individual freedom; and in the arguments that road safety advocates then formulated to infuse decisions about road-related behaviours with moral weight, expanding the parameters of moral responsibility. Professor Weston will conclude with a few reflections on how this might inform debates and decisions surrounding public health law today.
Pr茅venir l鈥檌tin茅rance jeunesse
11 octobre 2024 12-13h30 PM EST
Webinaire en ligne
Rejoignez le Collectif qu茅b茅cois pour la pr茅vention de l鈥檌tin茅rance (CQPI) le vendredi 11 octobre, de 12h 脿 13h30, pour un 茅change inspirant anim茅 par C茅cile Arbaud, Directrice g茅n茅rale de Dans la rue et co-fondatrice de la Coalition Jeunes+, aux c么t茅s de jeunes du Comit茅 Jeunes+. Ensemble, 脿 partir de leurs savoirs exp茅rientiels, de la recherche et des connaissances du terrain, ils feront le point sur la pr茅vention de l鈥檌tin茅rance chez les jeunes au Qu茅bec : o霉 en sommes-nous, ce qui est d茅j脿 en place et quelles sont les perspectives pour aller plus loin.
LALONDE@50: How can we move the needle on equitable health promotion?
May 14-15 in a hybrid format, via Zoom and in person at the Centre Mont-Royal in Montr茅al, Qu茅bec
This event is free of charge and will include simultaneous French-English translation.
ABOUT:
Lalonde@50
The Department of Equity, Ethics, and Policy (DEEP) of the 平特五不中 School of Population and Global Health welcomes you to our annual research to policy conference - Lalonde@50: How can we move the needle on equitable health promotion?
In 1974, Marc Lalonde, then Canadian Minister of Health and Welfare, released the authoritative A New Perspective on the Health of Canadians. He proposed a wide-ranging, holistic view of 鈥渉ealth鈥 that went far beyond traditional medical responses to acute conditions and chronic illnesses. His emphasis on preventive measures is widely hailed as ushering in the concept of 鈥渉ealth promotion鈥 as well as laying the foundations for a new interest in the social determinants of health both within Canada and internationally.
On the 50th anniversary of the publication of A New Perspective, this conference seeks to re-examine the impact and legacy of the Lalonde Report from multiple disciplinary perspectives - and look beyond the report to consider how public health has evolved and where it is headed.
Through a mix of keynote plenary presentations, break-out discussions, and a set of 鈥減olicy workshops,鈥 this conference will share the latest evidence and engage speakers and participants in identifying what it will take to address the causes of homelessness and exploring solutions to prevent it.
Why you should attend
Lalonde@50 will be a unique opportunity to engage with researchers, students, public health, community, and policy leaders to discuss the history and legacy of Marc Lalonde鈥檚 ground-breaking report, and to critically assess how far we have come in building a society that produces health, not sickness, The conference will feature a mix of keynote and panel presentations and discussions, sharing the latest evidence, best practice, and engage speakers and conference participants in proposing and assessing the feasibility of concrete strategies for moving the needle on equitable health promotion. Lalonde@50 will also engage future scholars from across disciplines in a unique experiential learning opportunity in moving research to policy and include policy project presentations by DEEP undergraduate and graduate trainees.
Confirmed Keynote speakers include (in order of appearance in the program):
- The Honourable Dr. Carolyn Bennett, Ambassador-designate to Denmark
- Dr. Luc Boileau, Qu茅bec National Director of Public Health
- Dr. Myl猫ne Drouin, Regional Public Health Director of Montreal
- Katherine Frohlich, Scientific Director of the Institute of Population and Public Health Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Partner organizations
The event is being co-hosted by the CIHR Institute of Population and Public Health, the National Collaborating Centre for Healthy Public Policy, the National Collaborating Centre for Determinants of Health, the Montreal Regional Public Health Department, and the Association pour la Sant茅 Publique du QC, and is sponsored by the 平特五不中 Institute for the Study of Canada and supported in parts thanks to funding from the Canada Research Chairs Program.
The 平特五不中-UofT Wellbeing Seminar (MUWS) series听will feature presentations and panel discussions from leading wellbeing researchers across a variety of disciplines. Wellbeing research is expanding quickly and receiving increased interest from policy-makers and the public, however as a research community we are spread widely across institutions, and most do not have the critical mass of researchers to host their own seminar series in wellbeing research. Conveniently scheduled for researchers in the Americas and accessible to听Europe and other time zones, we have conceived the Wellbeing Seminar to fill this gap and foster collaboration among researchers across career-stages and the globe.
Schedule:
January 8th听-听Carol Graham.听The Twin Crises of听Despair and Misinformation: A Role for Wellbeing Science?
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February 5th听-听Louis Tay.听Assessing well-being in societies: Psychometric, methodological, and data science issues to consider
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March 4th -听Matthew Killingsworth.听Human Happiness in High Resolution
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April 15th -听John Helliwell - Happiness at Different Ages
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May 6th -听Shige Oishi -听Culture and well-being: Conceptual and measurement issues
Did you miss one of the webinars? Recordings can be viewed on their website.
Conversations on Climate Justice 鈥 Perspectives from Canada and the Caribbean Webinar Series
The Role and Experience of Youth in Promoting Climate Justice
April 25, 2024 12-13 EST
Only on ZOOM
Abstract:
Join us for the final talk in our Conversations on Climate Justice 鈥 Perspectives from Canada and the Caribbean webinar series. This moderated discussion will explore the role and experience of youth in promoting climate justice in Canada, the Caribbean, and globally.
Moderator:
Shir Gruber
MSc. Student and National Director of Sustainable Youth Canada
Biography:听Shir Gruber has a bachelor of science in Hydrology with a minor in Geographic Information Systems at 平特五不中. She is completing a Master鈥檚 of Science at 平特五不中 studying wetlands as Nature-based Solutions. Her interest resides in empowering communities from the roots up and mitigating climate change.
She was co-president of Dawson College鈥檚 environmental club in 2019 co-leading the Montreal climate marches, was a TEDxYouth speaker, published work detailing a framework to implement grassroots environmentalism in academic settings, and was the regional co-director of Sustainable Youth Canada (SYC) in Montreal before entering her role as national co-director. She has been recognized as one of the Top 25 under 25 environmentalists in Canada by the Starfish Foundation.
Shir has conducted research contributing to changing a college鈥檚 policy on waste management impacting over 10,000 people, conducted research about bioremediation, invasive species and Climate Justice in Montreal, and conducted research in the Caribbean on the subject of agricultural adaptations to climate change at the University of West Indies through the Queen Elizabeth Scholars program. She serves on the Natural Resources Canada Youth Council where she is consulting Canada鈥檚 minister of natural resources on a just green transition.
Speakers:
Maggie Chang
Writer, Artist, Environmental Activist, Co-Chair City of Toronto Climate Advisory Group
Biography:听Maggie is a poet, writer, and artist whose environmental journey started in first grade when she learned about deforestation of the Amazon in school. Since then, Maggie has led campus secondhand clothing sales for sustainable fashion, organized a UN Sustainable Development Goal training, and helped establish EcoSchools Canada鈥檚 Youth Advisory Council, leading her to be named one of the first WWF Canada Living Planet Leaders and a Top 25 Under 25 Environmentalist in Canada. With a Bachelor of Environmental Studies, Maggie is passionate to be living her values to build an intersectional environmental movement as part of the 2022-2023 Natural Resources Canada Youth Council and the City of Toronto Climate Advisory Group. She is particularly honoured to have had the opportunity to practice international solidarity working with Fairtrade Organic Caf茅 Femenino Coffee communities in Peru during the summer of 2019.
Jhannel Tomlinson-Evans
Scholar Activist and Co-Founder, GirlCARE
Biography:听Jhannel Tomlinson is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Geography and Geology, at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica. Her research seeks to assess the capacity of Community-based Organizations (CBOs) to effectively support current and future climate change adaptation initiatives. She has published academic papers on the preliminary findings of her work and has also been a part of multi-disciplinary teams, conducting research on agriculture, climate change and rural development.
In addition to her academic work, she is a youth climate activist who is a member of the Caribbean Youth Environment Network (CYEN), Jamaica and is co-founder of Young People for Action on Climate Change (YPACC), Jamaica. She was a youth delegate at the Youth Climate Change Conference held in Kingston, 2017 and was a co-organizer in the local Rise for Climate event held in September 2018, which brought together youth participants who revealed their fears, concerns and recommendations as it relates to climate change.
Her involvement in climate action both through academia and activism, led to her being selected as the Jamaican Youth delegate to attend the 24th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, (COP24) held in Katowice, Poland in December 2018. During this conference, she was engaged in intense discussions and was invited to present on the factors contributing to the involvement of youth as change agents in the fight for a sustainable future. Since her involvement in the COP, she has been asked to participate in a host of local events including lectures, presentations and panel discussions.
She is currently a lead organizer for the Post-COP Youth Consultations being organized by the Climate Change Division (CCD) of the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation and was recently invited to attend the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) Youth Forum, the most institutionalized avenue for youth participation in the work of the United Nations, scheduled for April this year.
The poise and passion of this young lady in taking a stand against climate change, helps to showcase that the youth have a critical role to play and if we all work together, we can raise ambition, accelerate climate solutions and help to create a more sustainable future for Jamaica.
Pr茅vention de l鈥檌tin茅rance : les derni猫res avanc茅es 2024 - de la recherche aux politiques publiques
le 19 avril, 2024 - 10h - 17h
En ligne sur ZOOM
Le D茅partement d'茅quit茅, d'茅thique et de politiques de l'Universit茅 平特五不中 et la Mission Old Brewery ont le plaisir de vous inviter 脿 la conf茅rence annuelle (en ligne) du Collectif qu茅b茅cois pour la pr茅vention de l'itin茅rance (CQPI): Pr茅vention de l'itin茅rance: Les derni猫res avanc茅es 2024 鈥 de la recherche aux politiques publiques.
Cette conf茅rence pr茅sentera deux webinaires avec la participation d'experts internationaux en provenance de Finlande, du Royaume-Uni et de la Province du Manitoba. Le premier abordera le th猫me de la pr茅vention des 茅victions, tandis que le second traitera des allocations logement, les deux jouant un r么le crucial dans la pr茅vention de l'itin茅rance.
Trois de nos groupes de travail (Sant茅 mentale, Droit au logement, Processus judiciaires et correctionnels) partageront 茅galement leurs derni猫res avanc茅es au sein de salles de discussion d茅di茅es.
Cet 茅v茅nement est gratuit, et une traduction simultan茅e sera disponible.
The Latest in Homelessness Prevention 2024: From Research to Policy
April 19, 2024 - 10:00-17:00
Online over ZOOM
The 平特五不中 Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy and the Old Brewery Mission are delighted to invite you to the annual conference of the Quebec Homelessness Prevention Policy Collaborative (Q-HPPC): The Latest in Homelessness Prevention 2024: From Research to Policy.
This online conference will feature two webinars with international presenters from Finland, the UK, and the Province of Manitoba. The first webinar will address eviction prevention, while the second will focus on housing benefits; both playing a crucial role in preventing homelessness.
Additionally, in breakout rooms, three of the Q-HPPC鈥檚 working groups (Mental Health, Justice/Corrections, and Right to Housing) will present their latest advances.
The event is free of charge, and simultaneous translation will be available.
Conversations on Climate Justice 鈥 Perspectives from Canada and the Caribbean Webinar Series
Bringing Equity and Justice into Climate Governance and Decision-Making
April 11, 2024 - 12:00-13:00 EST
Webinar on Zoom
Abstract:
Join us for the second talk in our Conversations on Climate Justice 鈥 Perspectives from Canada and the Caribbean webinar series. This moderated discussion will explore key challenges, and strategies to address, issues of justice and equity in climate governance and decision-making.
Moderator:
Associate Professor & Canada Research Chair in Human Rights, Health, and the Environment
Faculty of Law, 平特五不中
Speakers:
Director General, Quebec and Atlantic Canada
David Suzuki Foundation
Christian Virgil:
Senior Lecturer,
College of Science, Technology and Applied Arts
Trinidad and Tobago
Biography:听Christian Virgil is an enthusiastic advocate for environmental and occupational health. Currently pursuing his Ph.D. in Industrial Engineering, Christian is a Senior Lecturer in Environmental and Sustainability Studies and has a diverse academic background in public health and business administration. His research is centred on assessing climate-related risks and developing adaptation strategies within organisations. He is also known for his contributions to academic discourse on climate risk through several publications and conference papers. He was recently selected to be a part of the International Standards Organisation Working Group tasked with developing organisational guidelines for managing occupational health and safety risks arising from climate change and climate action. His participation in the Working Group underscores his commitment to shaping global policies for a safer and more sustainable future. It also demonstrates his commitment to advocating for change in response to environmental challenges.
Conversations on Climate Justice 鈥 Perspectives from Canada and the Caribbean Webinar Series
Migration and Climate Justice
March 21st, 2024 - 12:00-13:00 EST
Webinar - On ZOOM
Abstract:
Join us for the first talk in our Conversations on Climate Justice 鈥 Perspectives from Canada and the Caribbean webinar series. This moderated discussion will explore key challenges and strategies to address issues of justice and equity in climate-induced migration.
Moderator:
M贸nica Ruiz-Casares
Professor, School of Child & Youth Care, Toronto Metropolitan University
Adjunct Professor, 平特五不中
Speakers:
Fran莽ois听Cr茅peau
Professor, 平特五不中 Faculty of Law
Former UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants听
Senior Lecturer, Institute for Gender and Development Studies
University of the West Indies
Challenging health inequalities research from a 鈥渟ociological imagination鈥
March 14th 1:30-2:30 PM EST
2001 平特五不中 College, 11th floor, room 1140 or via ZOOM
Dennis P茅rez Chac贸n, MSc, PhD.
Senior researcher & Associate professor
Epidemiology Unit, Research, Diagnosis and Reference Center (CIDR)
Pedro Kour铆 Institute of Tropical Medicine (IPK), Havana, Cuba
Speaker Bio:听Dennis P茅rez is a sociologist (Havana University, 1997); with postgraduate training on popular education, participatory action research, disease control (Master degree, ITM, 2004) and social development (Master degree, Havana University, 2007), among others. She holds a PhD in Sociology (Havana University, 2011) and in Health Sciences (Gent University, 2015). She completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Public Health Research Institute of University of Montreal (2016-2019).
Since 1997 she has worked as researcher at the Epidemiology Division of Pedro Kour铆 Institute of Tropical Medicine (IPK), Havana, Cuba. She has been working for nearly 10 years on building evidence on empowerment strategies for dengue prevention and control in the Cuban context. Her focus has been the dynamics of empowerment processes at small scale and the factors that could influence these processes when moving from micro to macro implementation. Based on her empirical, mainly qualitative, research and on her sociological background, and together with her colleagues, she has brought theoretical developments on the concept of participation and on some implementation issues.
Over the years, her research interest and efforts have shifted to better on how socio-political context and individual equity dimensions (e.g., health access, gender, race/ethnicity, and income) explain health gaps.
Abstract:听During the seminar Dr. P茅rez Chac贸n will illustrate challenges, opportunities, and advances on health inequalities research, sharing examples from empirical research on prevention and control of infectious diseases (e.g., Dengue, Tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS and SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19), using unconventional methodologies. The seminar will include a perspective of research through her own scholarly journey as Afro-Latina, working on different diseases and research contexts, and within a particular set of theoretical and methodological resources. The idea is to challenge current definitions and concepts or approaches on health inequalities research and share the contributions from a complementary sociological background, a participatory paradigm, reflexivity and transdisciplinary, into new alternatives of practicing research in Public Health.
This event is cohosted by the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health and the Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy.
脡惫茅苍别尘别苍迟蝉 de 2023
The 平特五不中-UofT Wellbeing Seminar (MUWS) series听will feature presentations and panel discussions from leading wellbeing researchers across a variety of disciplines. Wellbeing research is expanding quickly and receiving increased interest from policy-makers and the public, however as a research community we are spread widely across institutions, and most do not have the critical mass of researchers to host their own seminar series in wellbeing research. Conveniently scheduled for researchers in the Americas and accessible to听Europe and other time zones, we have conceived the Wellbeing Seminar to fill this gap and foster collaboration among researchers across career-stages and the globe.
Schedule:
December 4th -听Ruut Veenhoven.听Reflections on a half-century of wellbeing research
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Did you miss one of the webinars? Recordings can be viewed on their website.
Championing Change: Pediatric Surgeons Practicing Across Borders
Engaging with future leaders and advocates
December 05, 2023, 10-11am (EST) - Online via ZOOM
Speakers:
Sherif Emil, MD,CM, FRCSC, FACS, FAAP
The Montreal Children's Hospital | 平特五不中 Health Centre
Chethan Sathya, MD, MSc, FRCSC, FACS
Cohen Children's Medical Center - Northwell Health
Cohosted by The 平特五不中 Observatory on Health and Social Services Reforms, the Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy and the Department of Family Medicine.
Sponsored by听Dr. John T. Davidson to promote understanding of comparative healthcare systems and their effect on the work of physicians.
When: November 28, 2023 - 12:00-1:00
Where: Arts Building room 160
The MISC Brown Bag series is back! Bring your lunch and join us for a relaxed talk given by听Professor David Wright听on听Medicare and Migration: The complicated history of foreign-trained doctors and nurses in Canada.
Hot drinks and snacks will be served. No registration necessary.
Abstract:听Journalists and policy experts have recently asserted that Canadian Medicare is in an 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 crisis, one that can only be resolved by the licensing of thousands of foreign-trained health care practitioners. Indeed, the Conservative Party of Canada, which polls suggest is increasingly likely to form the next federal government, has recently unveiled a 鈥淏lue Seal鈥 proposal to fast-track the licensing of foreign-trained doctors and nurses. The goal is to address, or even to eliminate, the nearly six million Canadians who report not having a primary care practitioner. Although this initiative has been framed as a necessary measure to alleviate a recent phenomenon, this talk will argue exactly the opposite: that Medicare in Canada was conceived and sustained over the last 50 years by the backfilling of underserviced areas and specialties through the licensing of foreign-trained (and largely foreign-born) practitioners. This presentation examines the history of Medicare, demonstrating how the keystone of Canadian welfare state nationalism was built and sustained by health care practitioners who 鈥渃ame from away鈥.
David Wright听is Professor of History and Canada Research Chair in the History of Health Policy at 平特五不中. A specialist in the social history of modern health and medicine, he has published several books on the history of psychiatry, children鈥檚 health and disability, the development of hospitals, and, more recently, the history of Canadian Medicare. His most recent book (with Sasha Mullally),听Foreign Practices:听Immigrant Doctors and the History of Canadian Medicare,听was published by听平特五不中-Queen鈥檚 University Press, in 2020.
Housing, Human Rights and Public Health
What鈥檚 Law Got to Do With It?
Friday, November 3, 2023, from 11:00 to 12:30 p.m.
Hybrid -听2001 平特五不中 College Avenue, Room 1201 (12th floor) or Via ZOOM
Speakers:
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Lara Khoury
Full Professor, Faculty of Law, 平特五不中
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Alana Klein
Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, 平特五不中
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Moderated by:
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Pearl Eliadis
Associate Professor (professional), Max Bell School of Public Policy, 平特五不中
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Abstract:
Housing in Canada is in crisis. A flurry of multiple鈥 and often conflicting 鈥攑rogram and policy solutions are proposed, literally on a daily basis, by politicians, policy makers, the private sector and civil society. But underpinning all these interventions and our capacity to prioritize them, is a fundamental imperative: that until the legal basis of the right to adequate housing is recognized and justiciable, none of these initiatives will have the resilience or legitimacy needed to ensure sustainable and progressive realization of the right to adequate housing. This seminar will discuss how Canadian law approaches the justiciability of socio-economic rights and will discuss the varied legal tools that are generally available to decision-makers as well as civil society to promote favourable public health outcomes.
Cohosted by the Dept. of Equity, Ethics and Policy; 平特五不中 Research Group on Health and Law; the Quebec Homelessness Prevention Policy Collaborative; and 平特五不中 Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism.
Encouraging Preventative Care to Manage Chronic Disease at Scale
Tuesday, October 31, 2023, from 9 to 10 a.m.
Hybrid -听2001 平特五不中 College Avenue, 11th Floor, Room 1135; online, Zoom
Abstract:
We study how reminding high-risk patients with chronic disease of their upcoming primary care appointments impacts their health care and behaviours. We leverage a natural experiment in Chile鈥檚 public healthcare system that sent reminders before preventative care appointments to over 300,000 patients with type 2 diabetes and hypertension across 315 public primary care clinics between 2013 and 2018. Employing both a difference-in-differences and instrumental variables approach on national administrative patient-level data, we show that reminders increased preventative care visits, which led to more health screenings and improved medication adherence. In this at-scale program, we find substantial variation in implementation fidelity across clinics, which, once accounted for increases our estimates by over a third. Reminders also increased hospitalizations and reduced in-hospital mortality, suggesting an improvement in timely care-seeking behaviour among high-risk patients. Our findings inform healthcare settings where patients must first visit their primary care provider for approval before undergoing tests, receiving medication prescriptions, or getting referrals to other specialists. Through intervening at the first step in the cascade of care, we find that a simple intervention like reminders can have large and meaningful downstream effects.
Speaker: Claire Boone, PH.D.
Postdoctoral Fellow, Booth School of Business,
University of Chicago
Claire Boone is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Chicago, Booth School of Business. Her current research investigates health care provider and patient decision-making using experimental and quasi experimental methods, big data, and machine learning. She earned her PhD in Health Policy, Health Economics at UC Berkeley in 2022, and an MPH in epidemiology and biostatistics also at Berkeley in 2017. Her passion for combining the health and social sciences began at 平特五不中 where she earned a BA&Sc in Biology, Economics, and International Development.
Consent, Pelvic Exams, and Medical Training
A Film Screening and Panel Discussion
Thursday, October 26, 2023, from 2:30-5:00 p.m.
Leacock Building, Room 232 (855 Sherbrooke St W, Montreal, Quebec H3A 2T7)
Abstract:
Medical students often learn to perform pelvic exams on anesthetized patients before gynecological surgeries. In some cases, explicit consent is not sought. Why is this happening? How should we respond?
Recent years have seen increased attention on the topic of consent for intimate exams performed by medical trainees on patients under anesthesia, both in the media and in peer-reviewed literature. In the United States, legislation requiring consent for pelvic and other intimate exams has been signed into law in over 20 states. Canadians have been largely silent on this issue since a brief discussion took place over a decade ago. This event will initiate a national conversation about the topic of consent and intimate educational exams. A screening of the documentary 鈥楢t Your Cervix鈥, which examines the history of this topic in the US, will be followed by a brief presentation of recent data collected from medical students across Canada.
This event will include a screening of the documentary film 鈥樷 (trailer here) and a panel discussion.
Panelists:
础鈥檓补驳颈苍别 -听Director - Producer 鈥楢t Your Cervix鈥
础鈥檓补驳颈苍别 has been teaching and speaking about feminism and sexuality for over two decades. As a queer sexuality educator, 础鈥檓补驳颈苍别 wanted to impact people who were entering the field of medicine about sexuality and gender.
She earned her Master鈥檚 degree in Human Sexuality Education at New York University and studied film at New School University. She delivered her TEDx talk 鈥淥wning Your Sexual Power鈥 in Napa Valley and was named one of GO! Magazine鈥檚 鈥100 Women We Love.鈥
She developed, wrote and hosted over 60 episodes of a women鈥檚 sexuality program on the Pseudo Streaming Network. She co-wrote and produced the sold-out play Vulvalution in New York鈥檚 downtown theatre community. 础鈥檓补驳颈苍别 is author of Woman on Fire and co-author of Lesbian Sex Secrets for Men. She worked as a Gynecological Teaching Associate for 10 years in New York City and At Your Cervix is her first feature film.
Marlihan Lopez -听Black Feminist / Community Organizer
漏 Concordia University, photo by Lisa Graves
Marlihan Lopez is a Black feminist community organizer tackling issues surrounding anti-blackness, gender-based violence and its intersections. She coordinated the EDI (equity, diversity, inclusion) division for the Quebec Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres, where she did advocacy work and raises awareness on how gender, race, class and ability intersect in the context of sexual violence. She has also organized with movements such as Black Lives Matter around issues such as racial profiling and police brutality. She was co-Vice-President for la F茅d茅ration des femmes du Qu茅bec from 2017-2022 and is currently Program and Outreach Coordinator at the Simone de Beauvoir Institute. She is also cofounder of Harambec: Reviving the Black Feminist Collective.
Victoria De Braga - Medical Student
Victoria De Braga is a fourth-year medical student and is co-president of the MSS Obstetrics and Gynecology Interest Group at 平特五不中. She is passionate about issues related to patient advocacy, consent, gender, and women鈥檚 reproductive health. She hopes to contribute to the public鈥檚 awareness regarding sensitive pelvic examinations and any silent suffering experienced by people involuntarily placed in this position.
Phoebe Friesen - Medical Ethicist
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Phoebe Friesen is a philosopher and medical ethicist, working within the Department of Equity, Ethics, and Policy and the Department of Social Studies of Medicine at 平特五不中. Her work engages with ethical and epistemic issues related to the production and implementation of knowledge in the health sciences, drawing on feminist philosophy of science, ethics scholarship, and methodologies from the social sciences. She has been writing about, and advocating for, the importance of explicit consent for educational intimate exams since 2018. See the following examples of her work:
Facilitator:
Ariane K. M茅tellus -听Sexual and Reproductive Health /听Advocate and Consultant
Ariane K. M茅tellus is a social entrepreneur, consultant, speaker, birth and perinatal worker. Ariane K is passionate about perinatal, sexual and reproductive health, more specifically obstetrical and gynaecological violence and systemic racism in Quebec鈥檚 health care system. She works with the College des m茅decins du Qu茅bec as a member of the working group on an introduction training on cultural safety in medicine. She is the Regional Recruitment Coordinator for the province of Quebec and sits on the steering council committee of The RESPCCT Study (Research Examining Stories of Pregnancy and Childbearing in Canada Today) at UBC's Birth Place Lab, on Breast Cancer Action Quebec鈥檚 board and on the steering committee of La CORPS f茅ministe.
Her background has led her to examine the importance we give to the experience of marginalized women, particularly black and racialized women in Quebec's health care system, specifically concerning sexual and reproductive health and during the perinatal period.
Through her work, she hopes to raise awareness, inform and support these women, assert their rights to all those who work closely or remotely with them, and participate in the recognition of the various issues that concern them by institutions and the various communities affected by these realities.
Her work is rooted in love!
Sponsored by:
Medical Class of 1970
Department of Equity, Ethics, and Policy
Department of Social Studies of Medicine
Centre de Recherche en 脡thique
Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Institute for Gender Sexuality and Feminist Studies
Office for Sexual Violence Response Support and Education
iMPACTS
Research Group on Health Law
平特五不中 Obstetrics and Gynecology Interest Group
Feminism in Medicine Club
Whole Person Care Interest Group
Data ethics and mental health workshop
WHEN:听Friday,听Oct 6th, 2023, from 9:00 to 5:00 p.m.
WHERE:听2001 平特五不中 College Ave., 12th floor - Room 1201 or via ZOOM
ABSTRACT:
Canada Research Chair in Data Ethics and Dept. of Equity, Ethics and Policy Associate Member, Eran Tal, will be hosting an all day workshop on Data Ethics and Mental Health. With Keynote presentation by听Jo Henderson听(Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Youth Wellness Hubs Ontario, and University of Toronto). Discussion includes Ethical Iterations in Psychosocial Measurement and The Need for Epistemic Humility amongst many others.
Now what? Global health between COVIDs
Friday, September 22, 2023 - from 15h00 to 16h30
Hybrid -听2001 平特五不中 College Avenue, Room 1135 (11th floor) or Via ZOOM
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Anat Rosenthal, Ph.D.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
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Speaker Bio:
Anat Rosenthal is a Medical Anthropologist and a Senior Lecturer at the Department of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences and the Tamar Golan Africa Center at Ben- Gurion University of the Negev. Her research focuses on global health policy and healthcare delivery in resource-limited environments.
Rosenthal completed her PhD in Anthropology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (2009) and was a Fulbright Fellow at the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School (2009-2010). She was also a Lady Davis Fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (2011-2012), and an MHERC Fellow at the Institute for Health and Social Policy and Centre de recherche en 茅thique (颁搁脡) at 平特五不中 (2012-2015). She has conducted fieldwork in Israel, Malawi and Zimbabwe on the social and cultural effects of AIDS, healthcare delivery in resource-limited settings, the impact of climate changes on health services, national and international health policy, and undocumented migration.
Rosenthal鈥檚 work has been published in journals in medical anthropology, public health, and medicine, and her book on the rollout of HIV care in Malawi titled Health on Delivery: The Rollout of Antiretroviral Therapy in Malawi was published by Routledge in 2017.
Abstract:
Almost four years into COVID-19, the dust is settling on the impact of the pandemic on global health theory and practice, and the lessons (not)learned. Drawing from ongoing research projects, and personal observations and frustrations, this paper reflects on global health as an analytical framework and worldview through the lens of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on notions of the global community, history鈥檚 lessons, and solidarity.
February 15th, 2023 from 12-1 PM EST
Leacock Building room 808 (8th floor)
The Social Statics and Population Dynamics Seminar, in collaboraiton with the Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy present听"Social Housing, Neighbourhood Dynamics, and Racial Inequality: Lessons from the U.S. and Canada"听a talk with听Dr. Prentiss Dantzler, Assistant Professor at University of Toronto whose research sits at the nexus of urban poverty, neighbourhood change, race and ethnic relations, housing and community development. As an interdisciplinary scholar, Dr. Dantzler explores how and why neighbourhoods change and how policymakers and communities create and react to those changes.
Speaker:
Dr. Prentiss Dantzler听joined the University of Toronto as an Assistant Professor of Sociology in 2021. Previously, he held faculty appointments at Georgia State University (Urban Studies) and Colorado College (Sociology). He also served as a Canada-U.S. Fulbright Scholar at UT and as a Scholar-In-Residence at the Institute for Research on Poverty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He received his Ph.D. in Public Affairs with a concentration in Community Development from Rutgers University-Camden. He also holds an M.P.A. (Urban and Regional Planning) from West Chester University and a B.S. (Energy, Business and Finance) from Penn State University. His research sits at the nexus of urban poverty, neighbourhood change, race and ethnic relations, housing and community development.听.
The Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy are co-hosting an event with CAnD3 and the CPD.
February 8th, 2023 12-1 PM ET
Internalized Colorism and Psychobiological Distress Among Black Americans
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Speaker:
Alexis Dennis, Assistant Professor
Dept. of Sociology, 平特五不中
脡惫茅苍别尘别苍迟蝉 de 2022
October 19th, 2022
Pizza served from 12:00-12:30; Lecture from 12:30-13:30 EST
Hybrid Event
School of Population and Global Health
2001 平特五不中 College Avenue
room 1140
Montreal, Quebec, Canada听 H3A 1G1
or via Zoom
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The current evidence on marginalized adolescents: an intersectoral approach to inequalities, health, and public policy
Abstract:
Centered around a child-rights framework, this talk will provide recent evidence on social positions, their intersectionality, their inequalities, and their association with adolescent well-being; as well as provide current evidence that evaluates the role of structural and social actors in these domains.
Social inequalities span social conditions such as gender, race, ethnicity, poverty, material possessions, and visible minority status, among others. From an age-perspective, science is a homogeneous field where research is conducted by adults on children and adolescents; however, few include the adolescent鈥檚 perspective, voice, or contribution. Recent evidence indicates that there are social conditions that are specific to adolescents that place them at a health disadvantage. These include conditions such as relative deprivation, absolute income inequalities, living in a single-parent household, being involved in bullying behaviours, negative body size perceptions, citizenship status, disability status, and high smartphone use, to name a few. Disadvantageous social positions overlap in combinations making adolescent鈥檚 experiences and relationship with their health, unique. Although these social positions seem to be individual conditions of concerns, structural determinants, social policies, government ideologies, and international actors play prominent roles in social inequalities. When addressing social equity and justice, these adult-governed entities will need to consider new and different approaches to achieve healthier, more equitable societies.
Speaker:
Nour Hammami
Assistant Professor, Child and Youth Studies Trent University Durham
Biography:
Nour Hammami currently holds an Assistant Professor position in Child and Youth Studies at Trent University Durham in Ontario, Canada. The focus of her research lies at the intersection of investigations between social inequalities and adolescent鈥檚 health and well-being using innovative epidemiological designs and quantitative methods.
At the IHSP, Nour was a postdoctoral researcher focused on social inequalities in health among marginalized children and youth. She investigated the distinct mental and physical health disadvantage that marginalized social groups of youth are at, relative to the rest of the population. The groups of youth included: victimized and victimizing youth, youth living in low socioeconomic position, living in single-parent households, and non-majority groups including gender minorities, racial groups, visible minorities, etc. She used a variety of analytical skills in both cross-sectional and prospective study designs with Canadian and international study populations. Nour completed her PhD in Public Health and Health Systems at the University of Waterloo.
A central area of her research remains investigating disparities in health and understanding the structural, social, behavioural determinants that cause and that narrow these gaps using an equitable and inclusive approach. Nour acts as a reviewer for several journals and is a stakeholder with Health Canada.
September 29th, 2022
Coffee & croissants from 10:30-11:00; Lecture from 11:00-12:00 EST
Hybrid Event
School of Population and Global Health
2001 平特五不中 College Avenue
room 1135
Montreal, Quebec, Canada听 H3A 1G1
or via Zoom
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Why Health Care Needs Melancholy Principles
Abstract:
How long and in what forms the multiple resistances to public health during the Covid pandemic will continue to reverberate remains uncertain. Health care professionals might dismiss the protests as nothing more than ill-informed epiphenomena of populist politics鈥攏ot untrue鈥攂ut that would evade a self-critique that can address both public and professional discontents that pre-date Covid. This lecture proposes one aspect of that critique.
The canonical principles of bioethics鈥攁utonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice鈥攕elf-consciously reflected an Enlightenment ideal of a rational, unified self, and that idealization affects the expectations of both patients and professionals. Those principles explicitly perpetuate an individualistic conception of both the patient and the healthcare worker, and they leave little space for the recognition of anyone鈥檚 suffering. I propose instead melancholy principles; that is, principles that foreground relatedness of selves in mutual dependence, inevitable shortcomings in responses to suffering, and layers of structural inequity. What鈥檚 at stake is rebalancing what both ill people and healthcare professionals expect of themselves, of each other, and of the institutional system in which they are mutually embedded.
Speaker:
Arthur W. Frank, Ph.D., FRSC
Professor Emeritus, University of Calgary
Biography:
Arthur Frank is professor emeritus of sociology at the University of Calgary. Since retirement, he has been a visiting professor at VID Specialized University in Oslo and, most recently, in the Program in Narrative Medicine at Columbia University. His books include At the Will of the Body and The Wounded Storyteller, an Italian translation of which just appeared. His awards include the medal in bioethics from the Royal Society of Canada and the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Canadian Bioethics Society. His newest book, King Lear: Shakespeare鈥檚 Dark Consolations, will be published by Oxford University Press in November 2022.
CWKN Webinar Series:
September 27th, 2022 - 14:00 -15:30 EST via ZOOM
Roundtable discussion with Sophie Howe, Future Generations Commissioner for Wales
Description: The Canadian Wellbeing Knowledge Network and the 平特五不中 Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy invite you to join a roundtable discussion with Sophie Howe, Future Generations Commissioner for Wales. This webinar will explore the progress and challenges in implementing Wales鈥 Well-being of Future Generations Act, and exchange learnings and approaches between Wales and Canada around moving beyond GDP to prioritize wellbeing and quality-of-life.
Speakers:
Danny Graham:
Chief Engagement Officer 鈥 Engage Nova Scotia
Over a thirty-year period, Danny Graham has held senior positions in business, law, government, and politics. For 10 years he was the Chief Negotiator on Aboriginal Rights for the Province of Nova Scotia. He is credited with starting the Nova Scotia Restorative Justice Program and has worked to advance justice reforms with the United Nations and countries spanning four continents. He has been recognized by organizations throughout Atlantic Canada for his community and public service.
He is currently the Chief Engagement Officer for Engage Nova Scotia 鈥 an independent non-profit that is leading the Nova Scotia Quality of Life Initiative, with an extensive network of partners from the public, private, academic and community sectors 鈥 provincially, nationally, and internationally. In 2019 almost 13,000 Nova Scotians responded to a 230-question survey administered by Engage NS in cooperation with the Canadian Index of Wellbeing. With Dalhousie University, they have developed pioneering tools to extract the findings of the survey in real time across demographic and neighbourhood profiles. Partners in all three levels of government, are considering the findings of the survey and the use of the tools to catalyse new action, inform policy decisions and shape the narrative about how to build a successful society.
Ben Horowitz:
Communications Director with the Executive Council Office, Government of Yukon
With experience working across the public, private and not-for-profit sectors, Ben has focused his career in ways that help advance the goals of sustainable development. He is currently leading a project in partnership with the University of Waterloo鈥檚 Canadian Index of Wellbeing to help the Yukon ensure government decisions and actions are informed by wellbeing evidence and indicators. Prior to joining the Government of Yukon in 2015, Ben worked in the fields of renewable energy and agriculture in the greater Vancouver area and California. Ben is a dual US/Canadian citizen and holds a journalism degree from the University of Colorado at Boulder and a Master鈥檚 of Public Administration in Sustainable Management from Presidio Graduate School in San Francisco.
Sophie Howe:
Future Generations Commissioner of Wales
In 2015, Wales became the first nation to place the UN鈥檚 Sustainable Development Goals into law, through its ground-breaking Well-being of Future Generations Act, which established seven national well-being goal. At the same time Wales established a Future Generations Commissioner, Sophie Howe, with a remit set out in law to be 鈥渢he guardian of the interests of future generations in Wales鈥. Sophie Howe鈥檚 role is to provide advice to the Government and other public bodies in Wales on delivering social, economic, environmental and cultural well-being for current and future generations and assessing and reporting on how they are delivering. Sophie has led high profile interventions around transport planning, education reform and climate change in Wales.鈥疭ophie has been advising various governments and the Secretary-General of the United Nations鈥 Office on proposals to update the UN鈥檚 governance to take into account the interests of future generations.鈥
Vincent Klassen:
Director General, Sustainability Directorate
Environment and Climate Change Canada
Vincent leads Environment and Climate Change Canada鈥檚 Sustainability Directorate, responsible for integrated federal planning, reporting and performance measurement through the Federal Sustainable Development Strategy, the Canadian Environmental Sustainability Indicators and Strategic Environmental Assessments. He has held leadership roles at Global Affairs Canada and Natural Resources Canada, including diplomatic assignments to Paris and Berlin.
Vincent dirige la direction du d茅veloppement durable 脿 Environnement et changement climatique Canada, qui m猫ne la planification, les rapports et la mesure de performance int茅gr茅e 脿 l鈥櫭ヽhelle f茅d茅rale par l鈥檈ntremise de la Strat茅gie f茅d茅rale du d茅veloppement durable, les Indicateurs canadiens de durabilit茅 environnementale et les 茅valuations environnementales strat茅giques. Il a occup茅 des r么les de direction 脿 Affaires mondiales Canada et Ressources naturelles Canada, y compris des affectations diplomatiques 脿 Paris et Berlin.
Moderator:
Chris Barrington-Leigh:
Associate Professor, Institute for Health and Social Policy and Bieler School of Environment, 平特五不中
Chris Barrington-Leigh is an Associate Professor jointly appointed at the Institute for Health and Social Policy and the Bieler School of Environment. Originally trained in upper atmospheric and space plasma physics at M.I.T., Stanford, and Berkeley, Chris subsequently received a PhD in Economics at UBC. Chris' interests are focused on empirical and quantitative assessments of welfare, and their implications for economic, social, and environmental policy, including the pursuit of overall economic growth and material consumption expansion. In particular, his research makes use of subjective well-being reports to address the relative importance of social and community-oriented aspects of life as compared with material consumption. He uses large international as well as national surveys, experiments, and economic theoretical modeling to understand individual and aggregate consumption benefits. Chris was a Global Scholar of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR), affiliated with CIFAR's research programme on Social Interactions, Identity and Well-Being.
The IHSP's Christopher Barrington-Leigh听spoke at the ISQOLS 2022 Quality-of Life for Resilient Futures: Sustainability, Equity, & Wellbeing Conference.
August 3-6, 2022
Burlington, Vermont USA
Disrupted Lives: Pandemic Policies and Youth Wellbeing
June 7th - 11:00-13:00
June 10th - 10:00-14:00
June 14th - 10:00-14:00
June 17th - 11:00-13:00
Description:
There is growing concern for the mental health and wellbeing of youth across Canada and globally. 鈥淵outh鈥 is always a challenging period of growth and transition 鈥 but it is clear that the last two 鈥減andemic years鈥 have been especially challenging for young people from diverse communities and countries around the world. The COVID-19 pandemic ushered in policies that affected youth, intentionally or incidentally, with mixed impacts. Governments worldwide and across Canada were forced to make critical decisions, quickly, with little evidence or knowledge of how the policy choices they made would impact diverse communities and populations. We are now seeing some of the impacts. There is not yet sufficient evidence on the short and long term effects, some impacts are evolving and much we still do not know, but it is clear that the impacts on young people have been significant 鈥 on their mental health, employment, relationships, education, and economic security. A growing number of research reports and surveys of young people across Canada point to disrupted futures, interrupted journeys and dreams, and times of confusion and insecurity in moments of transition that promise to have wide-ranging impacts for years to come. This conference will 鈥渢ake stock鈥 of the policy choices that were made by different governments. Participants will look closely at what we now know, and don鈥檛 know, about the impact of those choices on diverse populations of youth and discuss important considerations for future policy that promotes and prioritizes youth wellbeing.
The Disrupted Lives conference, co-hosted by the 平特五不中 Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy, UNICEF Canada and the ListenUP for Youth Wellbeing initiative, will bring together young people, researchers, community organizations, policymakers across jurisdictions and international leaders to 鈥渢ake stock鈥 of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and pandemic policies on youth. Through a mix of keynote plenary presentations, break-out discussions and a set of 4 moderated 鈥減olicy sessions鈥 focused on Education, Employment, Social Security and Public Health this conference will share the latest evidence, hear the perspectives and voices of youth and look critically at the policy choices that were made. Disrupted Lives will also engage speakers and participants in identifying priority policy considerations at this stage of the pandemic, and will highlight promising strategies for actively involving young people in shaping future policy.
Emerging Therapies for Orphan Diseases: Ethics and Economics
March 25th, 2022
10:00-13:00
Virtual Event
Summary:
The last decade has witnessed significant advances in regenerative medicines, particularly in the context of rare and hereditary diseases. Many such regenerative medicines are expensive and unlikely to fail traditional cost-utility analyses, thus placing heavy financial pressures on healthcare systems.
Until now, healthcare systems have been able to accommodate the costs of treating orphan diseases, given the small number of treatments available and the rarity of disease. However, as regenerative treatment approaches advance and precision medicine qualifies more and more patients as having orphan diseases, healthcare systems will face increasing challenges balancing the needs of patients with orphan diseases with those with more prevalent diseases.
This half-day symposium will bring together philosophers, health economists, clinicians, patients and policy-makers to address the ethics of resource allocation for rare diseases, particularly in the context of expensive treatment approaches like gene therapy. The event will involve four 20-minute presentations from diverse stakeholders, followed by a 1-hour panel discussion addressing whether- and how much- fair healthcare systems ought to budget for new, expensive regenerative medicines.
This event is sponsored by the Department of Equity, Ethics and Policy (DEEP) and the Class of Med 鈥70.
听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 听 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Th茅rapies 茅mergentes pour les maladies orphelines : 茅thique et 茅conomie
Le 25 mars 2022
10h00 - 13h00
脡v茅nement virtuel
R茅sum茅 :
La derni猫re d茅cennie a 茅t茅 marqu茅e par des avanc茅es significatives en m茅decine r茅g茅n茅rative, notamment pour les maladies rares et h茅r茅ditaires. Or, les m茅dicaments r茅g茅n茅ratifs sont co没teux et 茅chouent rarement aux analyses traditionnelles de co没t-utilit茅, ce qui exerce une forte pression financi猫re sur les syst猫mes de sant茅.
Jusqu鈥櫭 pr茅sent, les syst猫mes de sant茅 ont pu absorber les co没ts du traitement des maladies orphelines, 茅tant donn茅 le peu de traitements disponibles et la raret茅 des maladies. Cependant, avec l鈥櫭﹙olution des traitements r茅g茅n茅ratifs et de la m茅decine de pr茅cision, qui d茅tecte un nombre croissant de cas de maladies orphelines, les syst猫mes de sant茅 font face 脿 une conciliation de plus en plus difficile entre les besoins li茅s aux maladies orphelines et ceux des patients atteints de maladies plus r茅pandues.
Ce symposium d鈥檜ne demi-journ茅e r茅unira des philosophes, des 茅conomistes de la sant茅, des cliniciens, des patients et des d茅cideurs politiques pour aborder les enjeux 茅thiques de l鈥檃llocation des ressources pour les maladies rares, en particulier dans le contexte d鈥檃pproches co没teuses comme les th茅rapies g茅niques. Le programme comprend quatre pr茅sentations de 20 minutes de divers intervenants, suivies d鈥檜n d茅bat d鈥檜ne heure sur la question des ressources 脿 allouer, dans des syst猫mes de sant茅 茅quitables, aux nouveaux traitements co没teux en m茅decine r茅g茅n茅rative.
Veuillez noter que la traduction simultan茅e sera disponible pour cet 茅v茅nement.
Cet 茅v茅nement est parrain茅 par le D茅partement de l'茅quit茅, de l'茅thique et des politiques (DEEP) et la classe de Med '70.
IHSP Disability Working Group Presents:
Disability Symposium 2022
March 18th, 2022 - 12:30pm to 2:30pm
Disability & Well-Being: Theoretical and Applied Perspectives
Description:
New technologies, emergency situations, and scarce resources confront our policy-makers with hard questions and moral dilemmas concerning people with disabilities. An important factor in making decisions regarding how to best respond to disability needs and redistribute limited social resources is how the well-being or the quality of life of people with disabilities will be evaluated.
Testimony by disabled people concerning the relationship between their experiences and overall well-being has long been an object of social scientific and humanistic study. For instance, the 鈥渋ntuitive horribleness鈥 of certain impaired states has often been contrasted with testimonial evidence suggesting that people in such states do not in fact experience their lives as horrible. Disability activists that engage with bioethical issues have claimed that the field regards their lives as having less value, and disability theorists have problematized assessments of well-being in end-of-life and crisis contexts.
Speakers:
Joel Michael Reynolds, PhD
Kennedy Institute of Ethics,
Georgetown University
On The Very Concept of Disability
Joseph Stramondo, PhD
Dept of Philosophy,
San Diego State University
(Dis)Valuing Disabled Lives in Times of Crisis
Jonas-S茅bastien Beaudry, DPhil
Faculty of Law & IHSP,
平特五不中
Death as "Benefit" in the Context of Non-voluntary Euthanasia
Did you miss the symposium?
The IHSP Disability Working Group and the 平特五不中 Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism (CHRLP) present:
Protecting Disability Rights in a Pandemic
A Disability and Law Seminar with Laura Guidry-Grimes and Jonas-S茅bastien Beaudry
March 11th, 2022 - 1:00-2:30 EDT
The Equity Committee of 平特五不中 Faculty of Law, the IHSP Disability Working Group and the Office for Students with Disabilities present:
Disability, Law School and Beyond:Meet & Greet
February 16th, 2022
1:00pm 鈥 2:30pm EDT
This event will be mediated by Prof. Jonas-S茅bastien Beaudry (IHSP and Law)听and is intended to be a 鈥渕eet and greet鈥 for any student with a disability, their allies, and anyone interested to learn more on disability in academia and beyond.
Speakers:
Stephanie Chipeur is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Calgary's School of Public Policy. She has studied at 平特五不中 as an able-bodied student (BA '06 & LLM '15) and as a disabled student (DCL '22). She also holds a J.D. from the University of Toronto ('09) and is a member of the Law Society of Ontario.Steve Payette (He/Him) is a Quebec notary and an accredited mediator. He graduated from the 平特五不中 Faculty of Law in 2016, and subsequently obtained his Masters in notarial law at l鈥橴niversit茅 de Sherbrooke. Prior to his studies in law, he completed a Masters in communication. He is a sole practitioner on matters of private personal law, wills and estates, and mediation. Tetraplegic, car accident survivor and service dog user, he identifies as a person with a disability.
Preventing Homelessness in Qu茅bec: New Approaches
February 16th, 2022 10AM-1PM
Don鈥檛 miss this opportunity to discover new approaches to preventing homelessness in Qu茅bec. You鈥檒l hear from researchers and thought leaders in the field. This event is FREE of charge and open to all, so reserve your spot today! Places are limited. Hosted by the Quebec Homelessness Prevention Policy Collaborative, a joint initiative of OBM and The Institute for Health and Social Policy.
Mixed English-French language event with simultaneous translation.