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2. Pandemics, inequities, public health, information, response: Canada's failure?
- Author
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Béland F
- Subjects
- Canada epidemiology, Humans, Health Status Disparities, Information Dissemination, Pandemics prevention & control, Public Health
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. 'Tell Me about Yourself' -- Using ePortfolio as a Tool to Integrate Learning and Position Students for Employment, a Case from the Queen's University Master of Public Health Program
- Author
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Melles, Brenda, Leger, Andrew B., and Covell, Leigha
- Abstract
This paper explores the use of eportfolio to develop, demonstrate and promote core competencies in a Professional Master of Public Health (MPH) program at Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Piloted in 2016, the MPH Competency eportfolio is described as a purposeful collection of electronic evidence that demonstrates learning and achievement in public health over time. The eportfolio was framed both as a reflective learning process and a showcase product to demonstrate skills and competencies to potential employers. The eportfolio was implemented using an available tool on Queen's University's Learning Management System. To understand the impact of the eportfolio, students responded to a questionnaire and participated in a focus group. Themes identified from the student responses were: (1) eportfolio helped students integrate and reflect on their learning and experience; (2) eportfolio helped students to position their professional identity and experience for employers; (3) Students were more convinced of the value of eportfolio as a reflection tool than as a showcase product for a professional setting; (4) Students were not convinced that employers will actually look at an eportfolio; (5) The technology used in this study was limiting for students; and (6) Students were interested in using other established and more user-friendly platforms. The findings of this study will benefit any program or course of study seeking a means to help students integrate their learning and demonstrate their accomplishments, skills, and competencies. This paper addresses how to integrate eportfolio at the program level and also provides insight into the student experience of their use.
- Published
- 2018
4. Metacognition in Teaching: Using a 'Rapid Responses to Learning' Process to Reflect on and Improve Pedagogy
- Author
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Cox, Susan M., Jongbloed, Kate, and Black, Charlyn
- Abstract
In this paper, we critically evaluate the use of a weekly "rapid responses (RR) to learning" process in the context of teaching a graduate course on research methods over a three-year period. The RR process involved use of a short set of open-ended questions about key moments in learning that students complete, in writing, during the last five minutes of each class. The questions asked students to identify salient take-away messages, note when they felt the most and least engaged, name actions taken by anyone that were affirming or confusing, and consider specific "aha" moments. Our specific aim was to assess the following questions: What was the pedagogic value of the RR process? How did it inform our teaching and to what extent were there direct benefits of the process for students as well as for us as teachers? We found that the systematic feedback we obtained in this way supported weekly monitoring of student learning, facilitated response to trouble spots, and assisted in assessment of student engagement and classroom climate. It also provided insight into the efficacy of pedagogic strategies, such as student engagement in metacognitive learning, and models a process of instructors receiving feedback and being flexible to change. For instructors, the process enhanced motivation and professional development; plus, we found benefits in documenting instructor leadership and development. Finally, it facilitated deeper appreciation of the need to better integrate student self-assessment and the development of metacognitive skills as core components of the course.
- Published
- 2022
5. Effect of Internet-Based Learning in Public Health Training: An Exploratory Meta-Analysis
- Author
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Peng, Ying and Yan, Weirong
- Abstract
Internet-based learning is increasingly applied in medical education, but its effect in the field of public health training is still unclear. This meta-analysis was undertaken to explore the impact of Internet-based learning on students'/professionals' knowledge of public health compared with no intervention and with traditional face-to-face (FTF) formats. Two reviewers independently searched Medline, Web of Science, ProQuest, Google scholar, ERIC and Elsevier databases for relevant studies between 1st January, 1990 and 30th December, 2016. Studies in English language providing information on educational outcomes after Internet-based training in public health courses compared with no-intervention or a pre-intervention assessment, or with FTF control group were retrieved, reviewed, and assessed according to the established inclusion/exclusion criteria in the current study. There were 16 eligible studies with 1183 participants in total. Heterogeneity in results was detected across studies. A random effects model was used to pool effect sizes for knowledge outcomes. The pooled effect size (standardized mean difference, SMD) in comparison to no intervention was 1.92 (95% CI: 1.05 to 2.78; P<0.0001), favoring Internet-based interventions. Compared with FTF formats, the pooled effect size was 0.39 (95% CI: -0.06 to 0.83; P = 0.09). The study suggested that Internet-based learning was superior to no-intervention in improving students'/professionals' public health knowledge. Compared with traditional FTF formats, Internet-based learning showed a similar effect. [For the complete proceedings, see ED579335.]
- Published
- 2017
6. Leveraging mHealth Technologies for Public Health.
- Author
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Velmovitsky PE, Kirolos M, Alencar P, Leatherdale S, Cowan D, and Morita PP
- Subjects
- Humans, Canada, Digital Health statistics & numerical data, Digital Health trends, Public Health methods, Public Health statistics & numerical data, Public Health trends, Telemedicine statistics & numerical data, Telemedicine trends
- Abstract
Traditional public health surveillance efforts are generally based on self-reported data. Although well validated, these methods may nevertheless be subjected to limitations such as biases, delays, and costs or logistical challenges. An alternative is the use of smart technologies (eg, smartphones and smartwatches) to complement self-report indicators. Having embedded sensors that provide zero-effort, passive, and continuous monitoring of health variables, these devices generate data that could be leveraged for cases in which the data are related to the same self-report metric of interest. However, some challenges must be considered when discussing the use of mobile health technologies for public health to ensure digital health equity, privacy, and best practices. This paper provides, through a review of major Canadian surveys and mobile health studies, an overview of research involving mobile data for public health, including a mapping of variables currently collected by public health surveys that could be complemented with self-report, challenges to technology adoption, and considerations on digital health equity, with a specific focus on the Canadian context. Population characteristics from major smart technology brands-Apple, Fitbit, and Samsung-and demographic barriers to the use of technology are provided. We conclude with public health implications and present our view that public health agencies and researchers should leverage mobile health data while being mindful of the current barriers and limitations to device use and access. In this manner, data ecosystems that leverage personal smart devices for public health can be put in place as appropriate, as we move toward a future in which barriers to technology adoption are decreasing., (©Pedro Elkind Velmovitsky, Merna Kirolos, Paulo Alencar, Scott Leatherdale, Donald Cowan, Plinio Pelegrini Morita. Originally published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (https://publichealth.jmir.org), 12.09.2024.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Engaging community members to ensure culturally specific language is used in research: should I use gay, queer, MSM, or this other new acronym?
- Author
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Rubini, Kyle, Al-Bakri, Taim, Bridel, William, Clapperton, Andrew, Greaves, Mark, Hill, Nolan E., Labrecque, Max, MacDonagh, Richard, Miguel, Glenndl, Orvis, Shane, Osbourne-Sorrell, Will, Randall, Taylor, Reid, Marco, Rosser, Andrew, Presseau, Justin, and Vesnaver, Elisabeth
- Subjects
ACRONYMS ,LANGUAGE research ,SOCIAL marginality ,COMMUNITY involvement ,LGBTQ+ youth ,HARM reduction - Abstract
Researchers often use terminology to define their participant groups that is rooted in a clinical understanding of the group's shared identity(ies). Such naming often ignores the ways that the individuals who comprise these populations identify themselves. One oft-cited benefit of patient-oriented or community-engaged research is that language is local and relevant to impacted communities. This paper aims to contribute to the literature on how this local and relevant language can best be established. We ask how researchers can identify and implement accurate terminology, even when divergent perspectives exist within the communities involved. We draw from our experience with the Expanding Plasma Donation in Canada study, a community-engaged research study, which explored the views of people impacted by the "men who have sex with men" (MSM) blood donation policies in Canada. We describe the collaborative process through which we came to a consensual naming of this population, the challenges we faced, and a set of guiding principles we used to address them. We did not find an all-encompassing term or acronym that worked for all stages of research. Instead, we offer a set of guiding principles that can aid researchers engaging in a similar process: harm reduction, consent and transparency, collaboration and community involvement, recognition of missing voices, and resisting and/or restructuring oppressive standards. Plain English summary: The words and labels that researchers use to describe the communities they study does not always resonate with the actual members of those communities. Doing research in partnership with members of socially disadvantaged groups can help to ensure that the language used in the research is relevant, accurate, and respectful. Researchers studying issues related to men who have sex with men often struggle with knowing what term to use to describe this group of people. While many people may identify as "gay", "queer", "bisexual", or any other term, there are many men who do not identify with these labels but also have sex with men. Previous research on this topic is usually focused on arguing that a specific term or acronym should be adopted. As part of a larger research program to support more inclusive plasma donation, the current paper describes the process our research team undertook to ethically describe this complex community of diverse men who have sex with men. Rather than choosing one specific label to describe the community members in all situations, we describe a set of guiding principles that can be used to help researchers flexibly navigate language depending on the situation and context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Redeployment Among Primary Care Nurses During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study.
- Author
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Lukewich, Julia, Bulman, Donna, Mathews, Maria, Hedden, Lindsay, Marshall, Emily, Vaughan, Crystal, Ryan, Dana, Dufour, Emilie, Meredith, Leslie, Spencer, Sarah, Renaud, Lauren R., Asghari, Shabnam, Cusack, Cheryl, Elliott Rose, Annette, Marchuk, Stan, Young, Gillian, and Wong, Eric
- Subjects
NURSES ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,INTERVIEWING ,PRIMARY nursing ,NURSE practitioners ,WORKING hours ,THEMATIC analysis ,NURSES' attitudes ,RESEARCH methodology ,NURSING practice ,COMMUNICATION ,PUBLIC health ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,LABOR supply - Abstract
Introduction: Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, primary care nurses were often redeployed to areas outside of primary care to mitigate staffing shortages. Despite this, there is a scarcity of literature describing their perceptions of and experiences with redeployment during the pandemic. Objectives: This paper aims to: 1) describe the perspectives of primary care nurses with respect to redeployment, 2) discuss the opportunities/challenges associated with redeployment of primary care nurses, and 3) examine the nature (e.g., settings, activities) of redeployment by primary care nurses during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: In this qualitative study, semi-structured interviews were conducted with primary care nurses (i.e., Nurse Practitioners, Registered Nurses, and Licensed/Registered Practical Nurses), from four regions in Canada. These include the Interior, Island, and Vancouver Coastal Health regions in British Columbia; Ontario Health West region in Ontario; the province of Nova Scotia; and the province of Newfoundland and Labrador. Data related to redeployment were analyzed thematically. Results: Three overarching themes related to redeployment during the COVID-19 pandemic were identified: (1) Call to redeployment, (2) Redeployment as an opportunity/challenge, and (3) Scope of practice during redeployment. Primary care nurses across all regulatory designations reported variation in the process of redeployment within their jurisdiction (e.g., communication, policies/legislation), different opportunities and challenges that resulted from redeployment (e.g., scheduling flexibility, workload implications), and scope of practice implications (e.g., perceived threat to nursing license). The majority of nurses discussed experiences with redeployment being voluntary in nature, rather than mandated. Conclusions: Redeployment is a useful workforce strategy during public health emergencies; however, it requires a structured process and a decision-making approach that explicitly involves healthcare providers affected by redeployment. Primary care nurses ought only to be redeployed after other options are considered and arrangements made for the care of patients in their original practice area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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9. Evaluation of the Special Olympics Canada Coaching Young Athletes Training: Part B How's it Going? A Study of Active Start and FUNdamentals Program Implementation.
- Author
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Temple, Viviene A. and Field, Stephanie C.
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SPORTS participation ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,SPORTS for people with disabilities ,RESEARCH methodology ,CHILD development ,PHYSICAL training & conditioning ,MENTORING ,INTERVIEWING ,ATHLETES ,SPORTS ,PUBLIC health ,QUALITATIVE research ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,SPORTS events ,ATHLETIC ability ,INTELLECTUAL disabilities ,PHYSICAL education ,ADULT education workshops ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Training staff and volunteers is an important aspect of successful program implementation. This paper follows Part A of an evaluation of the Special Olympics Canada (SOC) Coaching Young Athletes Training course. Consistent with Kirkpatrick's four-level model of training evaluation, Part A evaluated program leaders' reactions to (level 1) and immediate learning from (level 2) the training. This Part B paper covers "on the job" behavior (level 3). In-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with youth program leaders (n = 11) from eight provinces. Overall, participants felt that more training related to working with children with autism and promoting positive athlete behavior was needed. The findings also lead us to suggest that program leaders need to develop a more fulsome understanding of how to foster skill mastery, including how to practice the same skill in many and varied ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
10. What is the fracking story in Canada?
- Author
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Olive, Andrea
- Subjects
HYDRAULIC fracturing ,INDUSTRIAL pollution ,PUBLIC health ,WATER pollution prevention ,ECONOMIC development ,FRAMES (Social sciences) ,ENERGY policy ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines news media coverage of hydraulic fracturing in Canada over a five-year period in five newspapers. Hydraulic fracturing, or 'fracking,' has reenergized the North American oil and gas market. This technology has increased economic growth, but it also comes with unknown and uncertain environmental and public health risks. Regulation of the fracking industry varies globally. In Canada there are three provinces that engage in large volume fracking and four provinces that have placed a moratorium on fracking. This paper demonstrates that the Canadian fracking story is about five frames: water pollution, economic benefits, uncertain risks, moratoriums, and energy independence. There is a difference between coverage in the two national newspapers as well as a difference in national and provincial coverage. In Nova Scotia, where fracking is banned, the media focuses primarily on environmental issues and benefits to the local economy. In Saskatchewan, where fracking for oil is an essential part of the economy, the media focuses on economic benefits and downplays other frames. Overall, across the five papers, the media coverage is highly selective and focuses on particular stories about the economy or the environment, but not both. Quelle est la chronique de la fracturation hydraulique au Canada? Cet article fait état de la couverture médiatique liée à la fracturation hydraulique au Canada par cinq journaux sur une période de cinq ans. La fracturation hydraulique a revitalisé le marché nord-américain des hydrocarbures. Cette technologie favorise la croissance économique, mais comporte également des risques écologiques et sanitaires inconnus et incertains. La réglementation régissant l'industrie de la fracturation varie selon les pays. À l'échelle canadienne, trois provinces ont réalisé d'importantes opérations de fracturation et quatre provinces ont imposé un moratoire à la fracturation hydraulique. Cet article montre que le cadrage médiatique de la fracturation hydraulique repose sur cinq thématiques : la pollution hydrique, les retombées économiques, l'incertitude liée aux risques, les moratoires et la souveraineté énergétique. Le cadrage médiatique varie entre les deux journaux nationaux ainsi qu'entre les médias nationaux et provinciaux. En Nouvelle-Écosse, où la fracturation est interdite, les médias mettent l'accent sur les questions environnementales et les retombées pour l'économie locale. En Saskatchewan, où la fracturation pour extraire du pétrole joue un rôle économique primordial, les médias se concentrent sur les retombées économiques et minorent l'importance des autres thématiques. Dans l'ensemble, les cinq journaux appliquent un filtre sélectif dans le traitement du sujet et publient des reportages spécifiques portant sur l'économie ou sur l'environnement, mais pas les deux. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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11. Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the sexual and reproductive health of adolescents in Alberta, Canada.
- Author
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Meherali, Salima, Rehmani, Amyna Ismail, Ahmad, Mariam, Adewale, Bisi, Kauser, Samar, Lebeuf, Simone, Benoit, James, and Scott, Shannon D.
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REPRODUCTIVE health ,QUALITATIVE research ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,RESEARCH funding ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,PUBLIC health ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SEXUAL health - Abstract
Purpose: The COVID-19 pandemic led to major service disruptions in the healthcare sector, especially regarding sexual and reproductive health services. However, the impact of the pandemic on Canadian adolescents is relatively unknown. This study aimed to investigate the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated public health measures on the sexual and reproductive health (SRH) of adolescents in Alberta, Canada. Methods: A qualitative study using an interpretive description (ID) approach and community-based participatory research principles was conducted to capture the subjective experience and perceptions of adolescents and service providers. With the collaboration of the Adolescent Advisory Group and community partners, 18 adolescents and 15 service providers were recruited for the study through purposive sampling. Findings from the qualitative interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis. Results: Three major themes emerged from the analysis: (1) COVID-19 SRH experience, (2) barriers to SRH, and (3) adolescent SRH strategies. Our findings highlight numerous barriers and challenges that prevented adolescents from accessing SRH education, products, and services. Conclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic had a profound impact on the SRH and the well-being of adolescents. Our study reflects the need for diverse SRH strategies to maintain continued access to SRH resources during disruptive events, such as the pandemic. Plain language summary: Access to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services is a basic human right. All individuals require access to appropriate SRH services to maintain their optimal sexual and reproductive health. Adolescents require special guidance, support, and youth-friendly services in matters of SRH as they enter puberty and explore their sexual identity. However, during the COVID-19 pandemic, many health and SRH services were suspended. Access to SRH products and services became difficult due to public health restrictions, which has possible negative consequences for adolescents' SRH. The experiences of adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic regarding their SRH are not reported in Alberta, Canada. Therefore, we explored the impacts of these public health restrictions on adolescents' SRH. We performed qualitative interviews with adolescents and SRH service providers to know their perspectives on how the pandemic influenced the SRH of adolescents. This paper provides insights into the barriers faced by adolescents while accessing SRH services during the pandemic, as well as their perceptions of digital strategies, such as mobile applications, and other recommendations for supporting SRH education and services. Based on the study findings, an adolescent-friendly mobile application will be developed to provide a virtual platform connecting adolescents to SRH educational resources, services, and support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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12. Strengthening Community Roots: Anchoring Newcomers in Wellness and Sustainability (SCORE!): A protocol for the co-design and evaluation of a healthy active living program among a newcomer community in Canada.
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Wahi, Gita, Kandasamy, Sujane, Bangdiwala, Shrikant I., Baumann, Andrea, Crea-Arsenio, Mary, Desai, Dipika, DiLiberto, Deborah, Georgiades, Katholiki, Jackson-Best, Fatimah, Kwan, Matthew, Montague, Patricia, Newbold, K. Bruce, Sherifali, Diana, Sim, Amanda, de Souza, Russell J., and Anand, Sonia S.
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,CHILDHOOD obesity ,BUSINESS partnerships ,PARTICIPATORY design ,BUILT environment ,PUBLIC health ,RESEARCH personnel - Abstract
Background: The burden of childhood obesity and cardiometabolic risk factors affecting newcomer Canadians living in lower socioeconomic circumstances is a concerning public health issue. This paper describes Strengthening Community Roots: Anchoring Newcomers in Wellness and Sustainability (SCORE!), an academic-community research partnership to co-design interventions that nurture and optimize healthy activity living (HAL) among a community of children and families new to Canada in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Methods/Design: Our overarching program is informed by a socio-ecological model, and will co-create HAL interventions for children and families new to Canada rooted in outdoor, nature-based physical activity. We will proceed in three phases: Phase 1) synthesis of existing evidence regarding nature based HAL interventions among children and families; Phase 2) program development through four data collection activities including: i) community engagement activities to build trustful relationships and understand barriers and facilitators, including establishing a community advisory and action board, qualitative studies including a photovoice study, and co-design workshops to develop programs; ii) characterizing the demographics of the community through a household survey; iii) characterizing the built environment and HAL programs/services available in the community by developing an accessible real-time systems map; and iv) reviewing municipal policies relevant to HAL and sustainability; leading to Phase 3) implementation and evaluation of the feasibility of co-designed HAL programs. Conclusion: The etiology of childhood obesity and related chronic diseases is complex and multifactorial, as are intervention strategies. The SCORE! program of research brings together partners including community members, service providers, academic researchers, and organizational leaders to build a multi-component intervention that promotes the health and wellness of newcomer children and families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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13. Wildfire Smoke and Protective Actions in Canadian Indigenous Communities.
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Batdorf, Brieanna and McGee, Tara K.
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ABORIGINAL Canadians ,SMOKE ,WILDFIRE prevention ,WILDFIRES ,EVIDENCE gaps ,INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
In Canada, Indigenous populations are disproportionately threatened by wildfire smoke and the associated adverse health impacts. This paper presents the results of a narrative review of 51 academic and related resources which explored protective action decision making during wildfire smoke events within Indigenous communities in Canada. A search of scholarly articles and other relevant sources yielded resources which were subject to thematic analysis and described in order to present a narrative review of current knowledge and gaps in research. A small and growing literature provides insights into protective actions taken by the general population during wildfire smoke events, but very little is known about protective actions taken by Indigenous peoples in Canada during wildfire smoke events. This lack of understanding hinders the capacity of decision makers to improve emergency management and minimize community health impacts of wildfire smoke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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14. Prioritization of public health financing, organization, and workforce transformation: a Delphi study in Canada.
- Author
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Dedewanou FA, Allin S, Guyon A, Pawa J, and Ammi M
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- Humans, Delphi Technique, Healthcare Financing, Pandemics, Canada, Workforce, Public Health, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: The increased scrutiny on public health brought upon by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic provides a strong impetus for a renewal of public health systems. This paper seeks to understand priorities of public health decision-makers for reforms to public health financing, organization, interventions, and workforce., Methods: We used an online 3-round real-time Delphi method of reaching consensus on priorities for public health systems reform. Participants were recruited among individuals holding senior roles in Canadian public health institutions, ministries of health and regional health authorities. In Round 1, participants were asked to rate 9 propositions related to public health financing, organization, workforce, and interventions. Participants were also asked to contribute up to three further ideas in relation to these topics in open-ended format. In Rounds 2 and 3, participants re-appraised their ratings in the view of the group's ratings in the previous round., Results: Eighty-six public health senior decision-makers from various public health organizations across Canada were invited to participate. Of these, 25/86 completed Round 1 (29% response rate), 19/25 completed Round 2 (76% retention rate) and 18/19 completed Round 3 (95% retention rate). Consensus (defined as more than 70% of importance rating) was achieved for 6 out of 9 propositions at the end of the third round. In only one case, the consensus was that the proposition was not important. Proposition rated consensually important relate to targeted public health budget, time frame for spending this budget, and the specialization of public health structures. Both interventions related and not related to the COVID-19 pandemic were judged important. Open-ended comments further highlighted priorities for renewal in public health governance and public health information management systems., Conclusion: Consensus emerged rapidly among Canadian public health decision-makers on prioritizing public health budget and time frame for spending. Ensuring that public health services beyond COVID-19 and communicable disease are maintained and enhanced is also of central importance. Future research shall explore potential trade-offs between these priorities., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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15. Research status and hotspots of social frailty in older adults: a bibliometric analysis from 2003 to 2022.
- Author
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Hengxu Wang, Xi Chen, MingXiang Zheng, Ying Wu, and Lihua Liu
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DISEASE clusters ,SERIAL publications ,CROSS-sectional method ,COMPUTER software ,HUMAN services programs ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,RESEARCH funding ,FRAIL elderly ,DISEASE prevalence ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CITATION analysis ,SURVEYS ,MEDICAL research ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,SOCIAL networks ,GERIATRIC assessment ,SOCIAL support ,AUTHORS ,PUBLIC health ,DISEASE susceptibility ,DEMENTIA ,PUBLICATION bias ,COOPERATIVENESS ,COVID-19 ,EVALUATION ,OLD age - Abstract
Background: Social Frailty is a significant public health concern affecting the elderly, particularly with the global population aging rapidly. Older adults with social frailty are at significantly higher risk of adverse outcomes such as disability, cognitive impairment, depression, and even death. In recent years, there have been more and more studies on social frailty, but no bibliometrics has been used to analyze and understand the general situation in this field. Therefore, by using CiteSpace, VOSviewer, and Bilioshiny software programs, this study aims to analyze the general situation of the research on social frailties of the older adults and determine the research trends and hot spots. Methods: A bibliometric analysis was conducted by searching relevant literature on the social frailty of the older adults from 2003 to 2022 in the Web of Science core database, using visualization software to map publication volume, country and author cooperation networks, keyword co-occurrences, and word emergence. Results: We analyzed 415 articles from 2003 to 2022. Brazil has the highest number of articles in the field of social frailty of the older adults, and the United States has the highest number of cooperative publications. Andrew MK, from Canada, is the most published and co-cited author, with primary research interests in geriatric assessment, epidemiology, and public health. "Social Vulnerability," "Health," "Frailty," "Mortality," and "Older Adult" are among the research hotspots in this field. "Dementia," "Alzheimer's disease," "Population," and "Covid-19" are emerging research trends in social frailty among the older adults. Conclusion: This scientometric study maps the research hotspots and trends for the past 20 years in social frailty among the older adults. Our findings will enable researchers to better understand trends in this field and find suitable directions and partners for future research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Tensions and Paradoxes of Scaling Up: A Critical Reflection on Physical Activity Promotion.
- Author
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Koorts H, Bauman A, Edwards N, Bellew W, Brown WJ, Duncan MJ, Lubans DR, Milat AJ, Morgan PJ, Nathan N, Searles A, Lee K, and Plotnikoff RC
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- Research Design, Australia, Canada, Health Promotion methods, Exercise, Public Health
- Abstract
Background: Achieving system-level, sustainable 'scale-up' of interventions is the epitome of successful translation of evidence-based approaches in population health. In physical activity promotion, few evidence-based interventions reach implementation at scale or become embedded within systems for sustainable health impact. This is despite the vast published literature describing efficacy studies of small-scale physical activity interventions. Research into physical activity scale-up (through case-study analysis; evaluations of scale-up processes in implementation trials; and mapping the processes, strategies, and principles for scale-up) has identified barriers and facilitators to intervention expansion. Many interventions are implemented at scale by governments but have not been evaluated or have unpublished evaluation information. Further, few public health interventions have evaluations that reveal the costs and benefits of scaled-up implementation. This lack of economic information introduces an additional element of risk for decision makers when deciding which physical activity interventions should be supported with scarce funding resources. Decision-makers face many other challenges when scaling interventions which do not relate to formal research trials of scale-up; Methods: To explore these issues, a multidisciplinary two-day workshop involving experts in physical activity scale-up was convened by the University of Newcastle, Australia, and the University of Ottawa, Canada (February 2019); Results: In this paper we discuss some of the scale-up tensions (challenges and conflicts) and paradoxes (things that are contrary to expectations) that emerged from this workshop in the context of the current literature and our own experiences in this field. We frame scale-up tensions according to epistemology, methodology, time, and partnerships; and paradoxes as 'reach without scale', 'planned serendipity' and 'simple complexity'. We reflect on the implications of these scale-up tensions and paradoxes, providing considerations for future scale-up research and practice moving forward; Conclusions: In this paper, we delve deeper into stakeholders' assumptions, processes and expectations of scaling up, and challenge in what ways as stakeholders, we all contribute to desired or undesired outcomes. Through a lens of 'tensions' and 'paradoxes', we make an original contribution to the scale-up literature that might influence current perspectives of scaling-up, provide future approaches for physical activity promotion, and contribute to understanding of dynamic of research-practice partnerships.
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- 2022
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17. The COVID-19 pandemic and cannabis use in Canada―a scoping review.
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Newport, Kelda, Bishop, Lisa, Donnan, Jennifer, Pal, Shefali, and Najafizada, Maisam
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CORONAVIRUS diseases ,PANDEMICS ,PUBLIC health ,EMERGENCY management ,MARIJUANA abuse ,MARIJUANA legalization - Abstract
Background: Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, the cannabis industry has adapted to public health emergency orders which had direct and indirect consequences on cannabis consumption. The objective of this scoping review was to describe the patterns of consumption and cannabis-related health and safety considerations during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. Methods: For this scoping review, we searched four electronic databases supplemented with grey literature. Peer-reviewed or pre-print studies using any study design and grey literature reporting real-world data were included if published in English between March 2020 and September 2021 and focused on cannabis and COVID-19 in Canada. A content analysis was performed. Results: Twenty-one studies met the inclusion/exclusion criteria. Study designs included cross-sectional surveys (n = 17), ecological study (n = 1), conceptual paper (n = 1), longitudinal study (n = 1), and prospective cohort study (n = 1). Most were conducted solely in Canada (n = 18), and the remaining included global data. Our content analysis suggested that cannabis consumption during the pandemic varied by reasons for use, consumers' age, gender, and method of consumption. Health and safety impacts due to the COVID-19 pandemics included increased mental illness, increased emergency visits, and psychosocial impacts. Discussion: This scoping review suggested that the impact of the pandemic on cannabis consumption in Canada is more complex than simplistic assumptions of an increase or decrease in consumption and continues to be difficult to measure. This study has explored some of those complexities in relation to reasons for use, age, gender, method of consumption, and health impacts. This scoping review is limited by focusing on the breadth compared to depth. Conclusions: Legalizing nonmedical use of cannabis in Canada in 2018 has had its challenges of implementation, one of which has been the changing context of the society. The findings of this study can help inform cannabis policy updates in Canada as the country is reaching its fifth year of legalizing nonmedical use of cannabis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. Relationships of Cannabis Policy Liberalization With Alcohol Use and Co-Use With Cannabis: A Narrative Review.
- Author
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Pacula, Rosalie Liccardo, Smart, Rosanna, Lira, Marlene C., Pessar, Seema Choksy, Blanchette, Jason G., and Naimi, Timothy S.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,ONLINE information services ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PUBLIC health ,RISK assessment ,GOVERNMENT policy ,ALCOHOL drinking ,MEDLINE - Abstract
PURPOSE: The liberalization of cannabis policies has the potential to affect the use of other substances and the harms from using them, particularly alcohol. Although a previous review of this literature found conflicting results regarding the relationship between cannabis policy and alcohol-related outcomes, cannabis policies have continued to evolve rapidly in the years since that review. SEARCH METHODS: The authors conducted a narrative review of studies published between January 1, 2015, and December 31, 2020, that assessed the effects of cannabis policies on the use of alcohol in the United States or Canada. SEARCH RESULTS: The initial search identified 3,446 unique monographs. Of these, 23 met all inclusion criteria and were included in the review, and five captured simultaneous or concurrent use of alcohol and cannabis. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Associations between cannabis policy liberalization and alcohol use, alcohol-related outcomes, and the co-use of alcohol and cannabis were inconclusive, with studies finding positive associations, no associations, and negative associations. Although several studies found that cannabis policy liberalization was associated with decreases in alcohol use measures, these same studies showed no impact of the cannabis policy on cannabis use itself. The lack of a consistent association was robust to subject age, outcome measure (e.g., use, medical utilization, driving), and type of cannabis policy; however, this may be due to the small number of studies for each type of outcome. This paper discusses several notable limitations of the evidence base and offers suggestions for improving consistency and comparability of research going forward, including a stronger classification of cannabis policy, inclusion of measures of the alcohol policy environment, verification of the impact of cannabis policy on cannabis use, and consideration of mediation effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The Construction of National Image of China by English World Media in Public Health Emergencies.
- Author
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Zhang D
- Subjects
- Australia, Canada, China, Humans, United States, Emergencies, Public Health
- Abstract
Based on the latest coronavirus corpus of the English corpus collection list (English-corpora), this paper aims to do the data mining of the China-related reports reported by the media of the United States, Canada, Britain, and Australia in public health emergencies. It tries to analyze how the English world media construct China's national image on the basis of the theory of evidentiality. It is found that the national media in the English world media report on China's national image show a dynamic process of "concern-worry-stigmatization-dumping." The western media made the construction of China's national image by subjective reports, objective but negative media discourse, and "double standards.", Competing Interests: The author declares that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the present study., (Copyright © 2022 Dian Zhang.)
- Published
- 2022
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20. Children as an afterthought during COVID-19: defining a child-inclusive ethical framework for pandemic policymaking.
- Author
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Campbell, Sydney and Carnevale, Franco A.
- Subjects
YOUNG adults ,PANDEMICS ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PUBLIC health ethics ,COVID-19 ,CHILDREN'S rights ,EMERGENCY management ,PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
Background: Following the SARS pandemic, jurisdictions around the world began developing ethical resource allocation frameworks for future pandemics-one such framework was developed by Thompson and colleagues. While this framework offers a solid backbone upon which decision-makers can rest assured that their work is driven by rigorous ethical processes and principles, it fails to take into account the nuanced experiences and interests of children and youth (i.e., young people) in a pandemic context. The current COVID-19 pandemic offers an opportunity to re-examine this framework from young people's perspectives, informed by advances in childhood ethics and children's rights.Main Body: In this paper, we revisit the Thompson et al. framework and propose adaptations to the ethical processes and values outlined therein. This work is informed by expertise in clinical ethics and literature related to impacts of COVID-19 and other pandemics on the health and well-being of children around the world, though with particular attention to Canada. During the processes of drafting this work, stakeholders were consulted-aligned with the approach used by Thompson and colleagues-to validate the interpretations provided. We also propose a new principle, namely practicability, to indicate the complex balance between what is possible and what is convenient that is required in ethically sound decisions in the context of services affecting young people. We outline and discuss the strengths and limitations of our work and indicate next steps for scholars in the areas of childhood studies and child health.Conclusion: Efforts to ensure frameworks are truly child-inclusive should be the status-quo, so pandemic impacts and policy implications can be considered in advance of emergency preparedness contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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21. A public health mission in Canada in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.
- Author
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Lavoie, Marie
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,COVID-19 vaccines ,PUBLIC health ,ANTIVIRAL agents ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,SOCIAL distancing ,HAND washing ,COVID-19 pandemic ,DIFFUSION of innovations - Abstract
Many governments in the world reacted to the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic by swiftly offering stimulus packages to their populations. While public unpreparedness was dramatic, it was not unexpected: many alarms had been sounded. Strategies by the federal and various provincial governments of Canada in core sectors predisposed the country to the current situation and weakened its capacity to respond adequately. This paper reviews the cumulative effects of these strategic orientations: a deficient investment strategy in fundamental science; disconnect between laboratory work and the country's capacity to produce vaccines and antiviral drugs; the priority of cost efficiency that led to overwhelming dependency on foreign production of medical supplies; and dramatic spending cuts in public health. We will discuss a Mission strategy to exit the crisis that takes a long-term perspective, in which public interest and public health, combined with a strong State leadership, stimulate innovation and collaboration between national and international actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Existing eHealth Solutions for Older Adults Living With Neurocognitive Disorders (Mild and Major) or Dementia and Their Informal Caregivers: Protocol for an Environmental Scan.
- Author
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Jose, Ambily, Sasseville, Maxime, Dequanter, Samantha, Gorus, Ellen, Giguère, Anik, Bourbonnais, Anne, Rahimi, Samira Abbasgholizadeh, Buyl, Ronald, and Gagnon, Marie-Pierre
- Subjects
NEUROBEHAVIORAL disorders ,DEMENTIA ,CAREGIVER attitudes ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: Dementia is one of the main public health priorities for current and future societies worldwide. Over the past years, eHealth solutions have added numerous promising solutions to enhance the health and wellness of people living with dementia-related cognitive problems and their primary caregivers. Previous studies have shown that an environmental scan identifies the knowledge-to-action gap meaningfully. This paper presents the protocol of an environmental scan to monitor the currently available eHealth solutions targeting dementia and other neurocognitive disorders against selected attributes. Objective: This study aims to identify the characteristics of currently available eHealth solutions recommended for older adults with cognitive problems and their informal caregivers. To inform the recommendations regarding eHealth solutions for these people, it is important to obtain a comprehensive view of currently available technologies and document their outcomes and conditions of success. Methods: We will perform an environmental scan of available eHealth solutions for older adults with cognitive impairment or dementia and their informal caregivers. Potential solutions will be initially identified from a previous systematic review. We will also conduct targeted searches for gray literature on Google and specialized websites covering the regions of Canada and Europe. Technological tools will be scanned based on a preformatted extraction grid. The relevance and efficiency based on the selected attributes will be assessed. Results: We will prioritize relevant solutions based on the needs and preferences identified from a qualitative study among older adults with cognitive impairment or dementia and their informal caregivers. Conclusions: This environmental scan will identify eHealth solutions that are currently available and scientifically appraised for older adults with cognitive impairment or dementia and their informal caregivers. This knowledge will inform the development of a decision support tool to assist older adults and their informal caregivers in their search for adequate eHealth solutions according to their needs and preferences based on trustable information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Public health moves to innocence and evasion? Graduate training programs' engagement in truth and reconciliation for Indigenous health.
- Author
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Castleden H, Darrach M, and Lin J
- Subjects
- Canada, Curriculum, Humans, Universities, Indigenous Peoples, Public Health education
- Abstract
Objectives: Indigenous peoples are the first peoples of what is now called Canada. Canadians have benefitted from their largesse and contributions in a myriad of ways that remain unacknowledged. Indeed, ongoing colonization and systemic anti-Indigenous racism in all quarters of our society have had heinous impacts on their health and well-being. Despite this reality and multiple calls for redress, Indigenous health is still missing from the Core Competencies for Public Health in Canada, having obvious implications for public health training programs and subsequent practice. Our objective in this paper is to critically explore the reasons behind institutional apathy for reconciliation in Indigenous health., Methods: Interviews were conducted with 19 leaders in Canadian Graduate Public Health Programs (CGPHPs) at 15 universities to explore the extent to which CGPHPs engage with Canada's 2015 Truth and Reconciliation Commission's Calls to Action to address Indigenous health. We used thematic discourse analysis to illuminate the landscape and make recommendations., Results: Participants agree that Indigenous health is important, but our data reveal an uneven landscape for addressing the Calls to Action. Curriculum was limited though we noted modest positive change. On the whole, the non-Indigenous (white) professoriate still needs to educate themselves while not all see the need to do so. Many deflected responsibility. Yet anecdotally, there is desire among CGPHP students who are already unsettling themselves to see such competency in their training., Conclusion: It is a settler evasion to claim lack of expertise, to express a desire to limit the burden on Indigenous academics, and to stand on the sidelines of institutional inertia. Our findings are a call to CGPHPs to do better., (© 2021. The Author(s) under exclusive license to The Canadian Public Health Association.)
- Published
- 2022
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24. Exploring the impact of the 'new' ParticipACTION: overview and introduction of the special issue.
- Author
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Faulkner, Guy, Yun, Lira, Tremblay, Mark S., and Spence, John C.
- Subjects
SOCIAL marketing ,PHYSICAL activity ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH promotion ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
ParticipACTION is the Canadian physical activity communications and social marketing organization first launched in the fall of 1971 and then ceased operations in 2001. ParticipACTION was relaunched in 2007. Framed as a public health natural experiment, evidence was collected from a population- based survey of knowledge, awareness, understanding of physical activity, and physical activity levels among Canadians (individual level), and key informant surveys and interviews examining capacity, readiness and advocacy for physical activity promotion among physical activity organizations (organizational level). The purpose of this paper is to first provide an overview of some of the major initiatives undertaken by the 'new' ParticipACTION that may have contributed to any changes at these individual or organizational levels. Second, the paper sets the stage for the three empirical papers in this special series reporting follow-up results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
25. Surveying the local public health response to COVID-19 in Canada: Study protocol.
- Author
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Plante C, Bandara T, Baugh Littlejohns L, Sandhu N, Pham A, and Neudorf C
- Subjects
- Canada epidemiology, Clinical Protocols, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, COVID-19 epidemiology, Pandemics prevention & control, Public Health statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Public health services and systems research is under-developed in Canada and this is particularly the case with respect to research on local public health unit operational functioning and capacity. The purpose of this paper is to report on a study that will collect retrospective information on the local public health response to COVID-19 throughout Canada between 2020 and 2021., Methods/design: The goal of the study is to develop and implement a study framework that will collect retrospective information on the local public health system response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. This study will involve administering a mixed-method survey to Medical Health Officers/Medical Officers of Health in every local and regional public health unit across the country, followed by a process of coding and grouping these responses in a consistent and comparable way. Coded responses will be assessed for patterns of divergent or convergent roles and approaches of local public health across the country with respect to interventions in their response to COVID-19. The Framework Method of thematic analysis will be applied to assess the qualitative answers to the open-ended questions that speak to public health policy features., Discussion: The strengths of the study protocol include the engagement of Medical Health Officers/Medical Officers of Health as research partners and a robust integrated knowledge translation approach to further public health services and systems research in Canada., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
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26. Antimicrobial Resistance in the Environment: Towards Elucidating the Roles of Bioaerosols in Transmission and Detection of Antibacterial Resistance Genes.
- Author
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George, Paul B. L., Rossi, Florent, St-Germain, Magali-Wen, Amato, Pierre, Badard, Thierry, Bergeron, Michel G., Boissinot, Maurice, Charette, Steve J., Coleman, Brenda L., Corbeil, Jacques, Culley, Alexander I., Gaucher, Marie-Lou, Girard, Matthieu, Godbout, Stéphane, Kirychuk, Shelley P., Marette, André, McGeer, Allison, O'Shaughnessy, Patrick T., Parmley, E. Jane, and Simard, Serge
- Subjects
MICROBIOLOGICAL aerosols ,DRUG resistance in microorganisms ,SEWAGE microbiology ,SEWAGE disposal plants ,DRUG resistance in bacteria ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is continuing to grow across the world. Though often thought of as a mostly public health issue, AMR is also a major agricultural and environmental problem. As such, many researchers refer to it as the preeminent One Health issue. Aerial transport of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria via bioaerosols is still poorly understood. Recent work has highlighted the presence of antibiotic resistance genes in bioaerosols. Emissions of AMR bacteria and genes have been detected from various sources, including wastewater treatment plants, hospitals, and agricultural practices; however, their impacts on the broader environment are poorly understood. Contextualizing the roles of bioaerosols in the dissemination of AMR necessitates a multidisciplinary approach. Environmental factors, industrial and medical practices, as well as ecological principles influence the aerial dissemination of resistant bacteria. This article introduces an ongoing project assessing the presence and fate of AMR in bioaerosols across Canada. Its various sub-studies include the assessment of the emissions of antibiotic resistance genes from many agricultural practices, their long-distance transport, new integrative methods of assessment, and the creation of dissemination models over short and long distances. Results from sub-studies are beginning to be published. Consequently, this paper explains the background behind the development of the various sub-studies and highlight their shared aspects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Government Options to Reduce the Impact of Alcohol on Human Health: Obstacles to Effective Policy Implementation.
- Author
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Stockwell T, Giesbrecht N, Vallance K, and Wettlaufer A
- Subjects
- Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Alcoholic Beverages economics, COVID-19 epidemiology, Canada, Commerce economics, Commerce standards, Costs and Cost Analysis, Government Programs, Government Regulation, Humans, Pandemics, Product Labeling legislation & jurisprudence, Public Policy, SARS-CoV-2 isolation & purification, Alcohol Drinking legislation & jurisprudence, Alcoholic Beverages legislation & jurisprudence, Health Policy, Public Health
- Abstract
Evidence for effective government policies to reduce exposure to alcohol's carcinogenic and hepatoxic effects has strengthened in recent decades. Policies with the strongest evidence involve reducing the affordability, availability and cultural acceptability of alcohol. However, policies that reduce population consumption compete with powerful commercial vested interests. This paper draws on the Canadian Alcohol Policy Evaluation (CAPE), a formal assessment of effective government action on alcohol across Canadian jurisdictions. It also draws on alcohol policy case studies elsewhere involving attempts to introduce minimum unit pricing and cancer warning labels on alcohol containers. Canadian governments collectively received a failing grade (F) for alcohol policy implementation during the most recent CAPE assessment in 2017. However, had the best practices observed in any one jurisdiction been implemented consistently, Canada would have received an A grade. Resistance to effective alcohol policies is due to (1) lack of public awareness of both need and effectiveness, (2) a lack of government regulatory mechanisms to implement effective policies, (3) alcohol industry lobbying, and (4) a failure from the public health community to promote specific and feasible actions as opposed to general principles, e.g., 'increased prices' or 'reduced affordability'. There is enormous untapped potential in most countries for the implementation of proven strategies to reduce alcohol-related harm. While alcohol policies have weakened in many countries during the COVID-19 pandemic, societies may now also be more accepting of public health-inspired policies with proven effectiveness and potential economic benefits.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. 2015 injury deaths in Canada.
- Author
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Xiaoquan Yao, Skinner, Robin, McFaull, Steven, and Thompson, Wendy
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,WOUNDS & injuries ,VITAL statistics ,CAUSES of death - Abstract
Injuries continue to be a public health concern in Canada. National injury death data are essential for understanding the magnitude and pattern of injuries. This paper used the Vital Statistics - Death database to examine deaths associated with injuries in 2015. Injuries were ranked against causes of death, and more in-depth analysis of injury categories was conducted by sex and age. Unintentional injuries were the 6th leading causes of death overall, with different ranking by sex. Among unintentional injury deaths, leading causes included falls, poisonings, motor vehicle traffic collisions, and suffocation, which varied by age group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. "Tell Me About Yourself" - Using eportfolio as a Tool to Integrate Learning and Position Students for Employment, a Case from the Queen's University Master of Public Health Program.
- Author
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Melles, Brenda, Leger, Andrew B., and Covell, Leigha
- Subjects
REFLECTIVE learning ,PROFESSIONAL-student relations ,PUBLIC health education ,PUBLIC health ,CURRICULUM ,CORE competencies - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching & Learning is the property of Society for Teaching & Learning in Higher Education and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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30. 'Doing' or 'using' intersectionality? Opportunities and challenges in incorporating intersectionality into knowledge translation theory and practice.
- Author
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Kelly, Christine, Kasperavicius, Danielle, Duncan, Diane, Etherington, Cole, Giangregorio, Lora, Presseau, Justin, Sibley, Kathryn M., and Straus, Sharon
- Subjects
SOCIAL problems ,RACISM ,LABELING theory ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research ,SEXISM ,HEALTH services accessibility ,FEMINISM ,DEBATE ,BLACK people ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIAL justice - Abstract
Intersectionality is a widely adopted theoretical orientation in the field of women and gender studies. Intersectionality comes from the work of black feminist scholars and activists. Intersectionality argues identities such as gender, race, sexuality, and other markers of difference intersect and reflect large social structures of oppression and privilege, such as sexism, racism, and heteronormativity. The reach of intersectionality now extends to the fields of public health and knowledge translation. Knowledge translation (KT) is a field of study and practice that aims to synthesize and evaluate research into an evidence base and move that evidence into health care practice. There have been increasing calls to bring gender and other social issues into the field of KT. Yet, as scholars outline, there are few guidelines for incorporating the principles of intersectionality into empirical research. An interdisciplinary, team-based, national health research project in Canada aimed to bring an intersectional lens to the field of knowledge translation. This paper reports on key moments and resulting tensions we experienced through the project, which reflect debates in intersectionality: discomfort with social justice, disciplinary divides, and tokenism. We consider how our project advances intersectionality practice and suggests recommendations for using intersectionality in health research contexts. We argue that while we encountered many challenges, our process and the resulting co-created tools can serve as a valuable starting point and example of how intersectionality can transform fields and practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A Comparative Analysis of Health Impact Assessment Implementation Models in the Regions of Montérégie (Québec, Canada) and Nouvelle-Aquitaine (France).
- Author
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Jabot F, Tremblay E, Rivadeneyra A, Diallo TA, and Lapointe G
- Subjects
- Canada, France, Health Policy, Humans, Quebec, Health Impact Assessment, Public Health
- Abstract
Many countries have introduced health impact assessment (HIA) at the national, regional, or local levels. In France and in Québec, there is increasing interest in using HIA to inform decision-makers and influence policies, programs, and projects. This paper aims to compare HIA implementation models in two regions: Nouvelle-Aquitaine (France) and Montérégie (Québec, Canada) using a case study methodology. The objective is to gain a better understanding of the similarities and differences in the approaches used to achieve the operationalization of HIA. The methodological approach involves four steps: (1) design of an analytical framework based on the literature; (2) exchanges within the research team and review of documents concerning the two implementation strategies under study; (3) development of the case studies based on the proposed framework; and (4) cross-comparison analysis of the case studies. The findings show that the two regions share certain similarities, including the strong commitment and political will of the public health organizations involved and a well-established culture of engaging in intersectoral action with municipal partners. Differences mainly concern their different approaches to implementing HIAs in accordance with the regional policies and the organizational and administrative contexts in place. This study identifies potential avenues for supporting the practice of HIA at the municipal level.
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
32. International population-based health surveys linked to outcome data: A new resource for public health and epidemiology.
- Author
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Fisher S, Bennett C, Hennessy D, Robertson T, Leyland A, Taljaard M, Sanmartin C, Jha P, Frank J, Tu JV, Rosella LC, Wang J, Tait C, and Manuel DG
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Alcohol Drinking, Canada, Diet, Female, Health Behavior, Humans, Male, Meta-Analysis as Topic, Middle Aged, Population Surveillance, Scotland, United States, Young Adult, Epidemiology, Exercise, Health Surveys, Population Health, Public Health, Smoking
- Abstract
Background: National health surveys linked to vital statistics and health care information provide a growing source of individual-level population health data. Pooling linked surveys across jurisdictions would create comprehensive datasets that are larger than most existing cohort studies, and that have a unique international and population perspective. This paper's objectives are to examine the feasibility of pooling linked population health surveys from three countries, facilitate the examination of health behaviours, and present useful information to assist in the planning of international population health surveillance and research studies., Data and Methods: The design, methodologies and content of the Canadian Community Health Survey (2003 to 2008), the United States National Health Interview Survey (2000, 2005) and the Scottish Health Survey (SHeS) (2003, 2008 to 2010) were examined for comparability and consistency. The feasibility of creating common variables for measuring smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity and diet was assessed. Sample size and estimated mortality events were collected., Results: The surveys have comparable purposes, designs, sampling and administration methodologies, target populations, exclusions, and content. Similar health behaviour questions allow for comparable variables to be created across the surveys. However, the SHeS uses a more detailed risk factor evaluation for alcohol consumption and diet data. Therefore, comparisons of alcohol consumption and diet data between the SHeS and the other two surveys should be performed with caution. Pooling these linked surveys would create a dataset with over 350,000 participants, 28,424 deaths and over 2.4 million person-years of follow-up., Discussion: Pooling linked national population health surveys could improve population health research and surveillance. Innovative methodologies must be used to account for survey dissimilarities, and further discussion is needed on how to best access and analyze data across jurisdictions.
- Published
- 2020
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- View/download PDF
33. Preparing for the future of public health: ecological determinants of health and the call for an eco-social approach to public health education.
- Author
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Parkes MW, Poland B, Allison S, Cole DC, Culbert I, Gislason MK, Hancock T, Howard C, Papadopoulos A, and Waheed F
- Subjects
- Canada, Education, Professional, Humans, Primary Prevention, Ecosystem, Health Education, Health Promotion, Public Health, Social Determinants of Health
- Abstract
As a collective organized to address the education implications of calls for public health engagement on the ecological determinants of health, we, the Ecological Determinants Group on Education (cpha.ca/EDGE), urge the health community to properly understand and address the importance of the ecological determinants of the public's health, consistent with long-standing calls from many quarters-including Indigenous communities-and as part of an eco-social approach to public health education, research and practice. Educational approaches will determine how well we will be equipped to understand and respond to the rapid changes occurring for the living systems on which all life-including human life-depends. We revisit findings from the Canadian Public Health Association's discussion paper on 'Global Change and Public Health: Addressing the Ecological Determinants of Health', and argue that an intentionally eco-social approach to education is needed to better support the health sector's role in protecting and promoting health, preventing disease and injury, and reducing health inequities. We call for a proactive approach, ensuring that the ecological determinants of health become integral to public health education, practice, policy, and research, as a key part of wider societal shifts required to foster a healthy, just, and ecologically sustainable future.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Nimble, efficient and evolving: the rapid response of the National Collaborating Centres to COVID-19 in Canada.
- Author
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Dobbins, Maureen, Dubois, Alejandra, Atkinson, Donna, Bellefleur, Olivier, Betker, Claire, Haworth-Brockman, Margaret, and Ma, Lydia
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,PUBLIC health ,MEDICAL decision making ,EVIDENCE-based medicine - Abstract
Since December 2019, there has been a global explosion of research on COVID-19. In Canada, the six National Collaborating Centres (NCCs) for Public Health form one of the central pillars supporting evidence-informed decision making by gathering, synthesizing and translating emerging findings. Funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada and located across Canada, the six NCCs promote and support the use of scientific research and other knowledges to strengthen public health practice, programs and policies. This paper offers an overview of the NCCs as an example of public health knowledge mobilization in Canada and showcases the NCCs' contribution to the COVID-19 response while reflecting on the numerous challenges encountered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. COVID-19 in St. James Town: the social determinants of health inequities reflected in Canada's most diverse neighbourhood.
- Author
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McNair, Avery and D'Souza, Darryl
- Subjects
DISEASE progression ,COVID-19 ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MINORITIES ,HEALTH status indicators ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,INFECTIOUS disease transmission ,ACCESS to information ,POVERTY ,HEALTH equity ,SOCIAL distancing ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
It has been well documented that COVID-19 does not affect all populations equally; the pandemic disproportionately impacts racialized, ethnic minority, low-income, and underserved communities. To further this conversation, this paper examines three adjacent, yet very distinct, neighbourhoods in the downtown core of Toronto, Ontario: St. James Town, Cabbagetown, and Rosedale. The socioeconomic positions of each neighborhood vary from low to high, and their respective COVID-19 positive case counts are inversed. After laying out the COVID-19 case data for each region, we examine the stark demographic and socioeconomic inequalities of these neighborhoods. Finally, we frame this information through the lens of the social determinants of health to identify gaps as well as steps toward meaningful solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
36. Integrating nutrition outcomes into agriculture development for impact at scale: Highlights from the Canadian International Food Security Research Fund.
- Author
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Wesley, Annie S., De Plaen, Renaud, Michaux, Kristina D., Whitfield, Kyly C., and Green, Timothy J.
- Subjects
EDUCATION of agricultural laborers ,DEFICIENCY disease prevention ,ENRICHED foods ,AGRICULTURE ,CULTURE ,DIET ,FOOD supply ,HEALTH status indicators ,HYGIENE ,NUTRITION ,NUTRITIONAL requirements ,NUTRITION education ,NUTRITION policy ,PUBLIC health ,SELF-efficacy ,MICRONUTRIENTS ,WOMEN ,THEORY ,HUMAN services programs ,FOOD security ,NUTRITIONAL status - Abstract
The Canadian International Food Security Research Fund programme supported research and scaling up of nutrition‐ and gender‐sensitive agriculture innovations from 2009 to 2018. Women and girls were identified as agents of change and were targeted as the main programme beneficiaries. Projects were implemented in 25 countries through multistakeholder partnerships among universities, research institutions, public and private sectors, and civil society groups, reaching over 78 million people, mainly women and children. Approaches specific to nutrition included growing more nutritious crops, improving dietary diversity, value added processing, food fortification, and nutrition education. Scale‐up for impact was achieved through a number of pathways that started with evidence through rigorous research, followed by a combination of elements such as understanding local and regional contexts to identify specific bottlenecks and opportunities for the deployment and adoption of successful innovations, selecting politically effective or influential partners to lead the scaling up process, and investing in long‐term local capacity and leadership building. Overall, the knowledge generated in the programme indicate that well‐designed nutrition‐sensitive agriculture and food‐based interventions can have meaningful impacts on pathways that will lead to better health and well‐being of women and children through improving household and individual access to nutrient‐rich foods. Longer intervention times are needed to demonstrate changes in health indicators such as reduced stunting. This overview paper summarises the programme and showcases examples from studies that demonstrate the impact pathway for nutrition interventions that encompass efficacy and effectiveness studies, value‐added processing, cost effectiveness of interventions, and bringing a proven intervention to scale. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. TO VAPE, OR NOT TO VAPE Electronic Cigarettes and the Ambiguous State of Their Legality in Canada.
- Author
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RAVEENDRABOSE, RANISH
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,PUBLIC health ,PRICES ,LAW - Abstract
The legality of e-cigarettes remains ambiguous in Canada in terms of their use and sale. The question of legality is of relevance due to the widespread and increasing popularity of e-cigarettes. The purpose of this paper is to determine whether any definitive conclusions can be drawn regarding the legality of e-cigarettes in Canada. Deriving an answer to the issue of the legal status of e-cigarettes in Canada involved a careful dissemination of the applicable legislation, Parliamentary materials, Health Canada notices, scientific literature, and general media reports. Ultimately, primary emphasis was placed on applicable and potentially applicable federal legislation due to federal legislation being the only avenue for a comprehensive and national legislative framework for regulating e-cigarettes. The question of legality was approached from a purely legally substantive manner and questions of whether Parliament should or should not allow the use of e-cigarettes were largely avoided. However, normative arguments in this regard inevitably arise, and were addressed tangentially, though they do not comprise a substantial portion of the paper. Coming to a conclusion required separating the question of legality into two components: (1) the legality of commercial use and sale and (2) the legality of personal use. It was determined that in terms of the commercial use and sale of ecigarettes, legality remains ambiguous. E-cigarettes can be considered illegal for the purposes of commercial use and sale if they contain nicotine, but are legal if they do not contain nicotine. Regarding personal use, they can be considered legal. However, both of these conclusions come with significant caveats. It was ultimately determined that comprehensive federal legislation would be the most appropriate way of regulating ecigarettes as the provincial legislation that has been enacted thus far has a very narrow regulatory scope. Ultimately, as the health effects of these devices become known, it will only be a matter of time before the federal government passes legislation that will add a much stronger sense of certainty to the question of ecigarette legality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Death and taxes: The framing of the causes and policy responses to the illicit tobacco trade in Canadian newspapers.
- Author
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Smith, Julia, Thompson, Sheryl, Lee, Kelley, and Alvares, Claudia
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL policy ,GOVERNMENT policy ,TOBACCO industry ,PUBLIC health - Abstract
The illicit tobacco trade accounts for 10% of the global cigarette market and results in US$31 billion in lost tax revenues annually. Despite legal prosecution of tobacco companies, and the introduction of new policy responses, the trade has reached an all-time high. Previous research documents how transnational tobacco companies have sought to influence government responses to the illicit trade in various countries through multiple means, including influencing of news media framing. This paper extends this analysis to Canada where the illicit trade is particularly problematic in scale and political complexity. Articles in Canadian newspapers, published from 2010–2015, were systematically searched (n = 177) and analysed to identify dominant frames, frame sponsors and policy positions related to the illicit tobacco trade. The results show that the most common frames present the issue in ways favourable to the industry. The most common non-governmental sponsors of these frames frequently have links to the tobacco industry, which are rarely disclosed. Findings indicate the need for Canadian media to be critical in its use of data sources amid industry efforts to shape public policy, and the importance of reframing policy discussions in public health terms based on independent evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A description of a tailored knowledge translation intervention delivered by knowledge brokers within public health departments in Canada.
- Author
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Dobbins M, Greco L, Yost J, Traynor R, Decorby-Watson K, and Yousefi-Nooraie R
- Subjects
- Canada, Capacity Building, Humans, Knowledge, Leadership, Surveys and Questionnaires, Consultants, Decision Making, Evidence-Based Practice, Health Personnel, Organizations, Public Health, Translational Research, Biomedical
- Abstract
Background: While there is an expectation to demonstrate evidence-informed public health there is an ongoing need for capacity development. The purpose of this paper is to provide a description of a tailored knowledge translation intervention implemented by knowledge brokers (KBs), and reflections on the factors that facilitated or hindered its implementation., Methods: The 22-month knowledge translation intervention, implemented by two KBs, sought to facilitate evidence-informed public health decision-making. Data on outcomes were collected using a knowledge, skills and behavioural assessment survey. In addition, the KBs maintained reflective journals noting which activities appeared successful or not, as well as factors related to the individual or the organisation that facilitated or hindered evidence-informed decision-making., Results: Tailoring of the knowledge translation intervention to address the needs, preferences and structure of each organisation resulted in three unique interventions being implemented. A consistent finding across organisations was that each site needed to determine where evidence-informed decision-making 'fit' within pre-existing organisational processes. Components of the intervention consistent across the three organisations included one-to-one mentoring of teams through rapid evidence reviews, large group workshops and regular meetings with senior management. Components that varied included the frequency of the KB being physically onsite, the amount of time staff spent with the KB and proportion of time spent one-to-one with a KB versus in workshops. Key facilitating factors for implementation included strong leadership, influential power of champions, supportive infrastructure, committed resources and staff enthusiasm., Conclusions: The results of this study illustrate the importance of working collaboratively with organisations to tailor knowledge translation interventions to best meet unique needs, preferences, organisational structures and contexts. Organisational factors such as leadership, champions and supportive infrastructure play a key role in determining the impact of the knowledge translation interventions. Future studies should explore how these factors can be fostered and/or developed within organisations. While KBs implemented the knowledge translation intervention in this study, more research is needed to understand the impact of all change agent roles including KBs, as well as how these roles can be maintained in the long-term if proven effective.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Strengthening the health system through novel population and public health fellowships in Canada.
- Author
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Weijs C, McConnell-Nzunga J, Prince SA, and Sim SM
- Subjects
- Canada, Humans, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Fellowships and Scholarships, Population Health, Public Health
- Abstract
This commentary provides a response to the call for papers that explore why public health matters today. We present our thoughts and experiences as members of the inaugural (2017) cohort of Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Health System Impact Fellows, focused on population and public health projects within our respective health organizations. One year in, we understand our fellowships as uniquely integrating population and public health attributes toward enhancing health system learning and impact. Despite references to the weakening of public health in the call, we are encouraged by our fellowship experiences that promote a focus on prevention and upstream factors that impact health. We are hopeful that a continued focus on population and public health in future fellowship cohorts will in time demonstrate positive health system change for Canadians.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Beyond bare bones: critical, theoretically engaged qualitative research in public health.
- Author
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Mykhalovskiy E, Eakin J, Beagan B, Beausoleil N, Gibson BE, Macdonald ME, and Rock MJ
- Subjects
- Canada, Humans, Research Design, Social Theory, Periodicals as Topic, Public Health, Qualitative Research
- Abstract
While qualitative inquiry has been a part of the Canadian Journal of Public Health (CJPH) for many years, CJPH does not yet have the reputation as a home for qualitative research that has a critical focus and that is cqqqonversant with contemporary developments in social theory and qualitative methodology. This paper describes efforts to establish CJPH as a welcoming home for critical, theoretically engaged qualitative research in public health. The paper introduces the Special Section that heralds the forward vision for qualitative research at CJPH. We specify what we mean by critical, theoretically engaged qualitative research and make the case for its significance for public health research and practice. We describe changes made in how qualitative manuscript submissions are handled at CJPH and highlight the contribution to public health scholarship made by the articles that comprise the Special Section. We issue an invitation to the public health community to support and participate in our vision to enhance critical, theoretically informed qualitative research in public health.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. On the use of digital technologies to reduce the public health impacts of cannabis legalization in Canada.
- Author
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Bedrouni W
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Canada, Federal Government, Humans, Young Adult, Cannabis adverse effects, Harm Reduction, Legislation, Drug, Public Health, Telemedicine
- Abstract
The imminent legalization of recreational cannabis represents a considerable public health challenge that requires proactive measures to ensure a responsible transition. The federal government recognizes the need for strict regulation to reduce cannabis-related health harms, notably among the youth. Additionally, the government plans to oversee a national public awareness campaign as part of a harm-reduction strategy. In light of the public health risks of cannabis legalization, this paper proposes the implementation of increasingly popular, evidence-based, preventive, and therapeutic digital interventions to minimize the harms of this policy among adolescents and young adults. These E-health interventions facilitate healthcare delivery, improve patient care, and overcome stigmatization, especially in the context of substance abuse. Therefore, we argue that a continuum of digital tools, including prevention programs, educational material, and therapeutic interventions aimed at reducing risky consumption of cannabis, should be embraced as part of a comprehensive public health strategy by the federal government in anticipation of legalization later this year.
- Published
- 2018
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43. Canadian Studies on the Effectiveness of Community Treatment Orders.
- Author
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Kisely, Steve
- Subjects
PATIENT compliance ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH services accessibility ,META-analysis ,COMORBIDITY - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Psychiatry is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Research landscape analysis on dual diagnosis of substance use and mental health disorders: key contributors, research hotspots, and emerging research topics.
- Author
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Sweileh, Waleed M.
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE abuse diagnosis ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,DUAL diagnosis ,SERIAL publications ,ENVIRONMENTAL health ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,SOCIAL factors ,CULTURE ,AT-risk people ,HEALTH policy ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,ECONOMICS ,NEUROBIOLOGY ,MEDICAL research ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,QUALITY of life ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,PUBLIC health ,COMORBIDITY ,PSYCHOSOCIAL functioning - Abstract
Background: Substance use disorders (SUDs) and mental health disorders (MHDs) are significant public health challenges with far-reaching consequences on individuals and society. Dual diagnosis, the coexistence of SUDs and MHDs, poses unique complexities and impacts treatment outcomes. A research landscape analysis was conducted to explore the growth, active countries, and active journals in this field, identify research hotspots, and emerging research topics. Method: A systematic research landscape analysis was conducted using Scopus to retrieve articles on dual diagnosis of SUDs and MHDs. Inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied to focus on research articles published in English up to December 2022. Data were processed and mapped using VOSviewer to visualize research trends. Results: A total of 935 research articles were found. The number of research articles on has been increasing steadily since the mid-1990s, with a peak of publications between 2003 and 2012, followed by a fluctuating steady state from 2013 to 2022. The United States contributed the most articles (62.5%), followed by Canada (9.4%). The Journal of Dual Diagnosis, Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, and Mental Health and Substance Use Dual Diagnosis were the top active journals in the field. Key research hotspots include the comorbidity of SUDs and MHDs, treatment interventions, quality of life and functioning, epidemiology, and the implications of comorbidity. Emerging research topics include neurobiological and psychosocial aspects, environmental and sociocultural factors, innovative interventions, special populations, and public health implications. Conclusions: The research landscape analysis provides valuable insights into dual diagnosis research trends, active countries, journals, and emerging topics. Integrated approaches, evidence-based interventions, and targeted policies are crucial for addressing the complex interplay between substance use and mental health disorders and improving patient outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Strengthening primary health care through primary care and public health collaboration: the influence of intrapersonal and interpersonal factors.
- Author
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Valaitis RK, O'Mara L, Wong ST, MacDonald M, Murray N, Martin-Misener R, and Meagher-Stewart D
- Subjects
- Canada, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Intersectoral Collaboration, Primary Health Care methods, Public Health methods
- Abstract
AimThe aim of this paper is to examine Canadian key informants' perceptions of intrapersonal (within an individual) and interpersonal (among individuals) factors that influence successful primary care and public health collaboration., Background: Primary health care systems can be strengthened by building stronger collaborations between primary care and public health. Although there is literature that explores interpersonal factors that can influence successful inter-organizational collaborations, a few of them have specifically explored primary care and public health collaboration. Furthermore, no papers were found that considered factors at the intrapersonal level. This paper aims to explore these gaps in a Canadian context., Methods: This interpretative descriptive study involved key informants (service providers, managers, directors, and policy makers) who participated in one h telephone interviews to explore their perceptions of influences on successful primary care and public health collaboration. Transcripts were analyzed using NVivo 9.FindingsA total of 74 participants [from the provinces of British Columbia (n=20); Ontario (n=19); Nova Scotia (n=21), and representatives from other provinces or national organizations (n=14)] participated. Five interpersonal factors were found that influenced public health and primary care collaborations including: (1) trusting and inclusive relationships; (2) shared values, beliefs and attitudes; (3) role clarity; (4) effective communication; and (5) decision processes. There were two influencing factors found at the intrapersonal level: (1) personal qualities, skills and knowledge; and (2) personal values, beliefs, and attitudes. A few differences were found across the three core provinces involved. There were several complex interactions identified among all inter and intra personal influencing factors: One key factor - effective communication - interacted with all of them. Results support and extend our understanding of what influences successful primary care and public health collaboration at these levels and are important considerations in building and sustaining primary care and public health collaborations.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Academic learning about public health in a Canadian university: contributions for Brazilian education.
- Author
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Patuzzi GC, Lira APS, Santos JDM, Reinisch AOB, and Veleda AA
- Subjects
- Brazil, Canada, Curriculum, Humans, Models, Theoretical, Social Determinants of Health, Students, Medical, Students, Nursing, Education, Medical, Undergraduate, Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate, International Educational Exchange, National Health Programs organization & administration, Public Health education, Universities
- Abstract
Objective: This paper aims to discuss Brazilian undergraduate students'learning in the public health., Methods: This is a descriptive, reflexive study, characterized as an experience report. Theoretical references of the Canadian and Brazilian health systems were used in order to analyze the public health and the impact of international educational exchange in professional qualification., Results: There are theoretical and conceptual similarities in health systems, in the understanding of social determinants. However, the application of the social determinants of health yielded more results in the Canadian system., Conclusion: Public health learning in a Canadian university highlighted a great focus on determinants, allowing the students to think about Brazilian health care models. With this experience, discussions can be held in educational spaces, reflecting the social implication of Science without Borders Program in professional education.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Movilización del conocimiento: aportes para los estudios sociales de la salud.
- Author
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Rojas Rajs, Soledad and Natera, José Miguel
- Subjects
CONCEPTUAL structures ,HEALTH ,INTELLECT ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL care research ,HEALTH policy ,MEDICAL research ,PUBLIC health ,SOCIAL sciences ,THEORY ,GOVERNMENT programs ,HEALTH literacy - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Ciencias de la Salud is the property of Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Senora del Rosario and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Criminalizing HIV Non-Disclosure: Using Public Health to Inform Criminal Law.
- Author
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SINGH, DAVINDER and BUSBY, KAREN
- Subjects
PUBLIC health ,CRIMINAL law - Abstract
Canada prosecutes more people, in absolute numbers, for nondisclosure of HIV status than any other country in the world except the United States and Russia. This paper analyses the Supreme Court of Canada's decisions that, effectively, created the criminal offence of HIV non-disclosure with a particular focus on how these decisions fundamentally misunderstood the science on HIV transmission. It then considers how HIV non-disclosure prosecutions have contributed to arbitrary, unjust and stigmatized treatment of people living with HIV and have undermined public health interventions. Finally, we evaluate a recent Directive issued by the federal Justice Minister and Attorney-General of Canada to the federal Director of Public Prosecutions concerning HIV non-disclosure prosecutions against the science and public health standards. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
49. Operationalizing the reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, maintenance (RE-AIM) framework to evaluate the collective impact of autonomous community programs that promote health and well-being.
- Author
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Shaw, Robert B., Sweet, Shane N., McBride, Christopher B., Adair, William K., and Martin Ginis, Kathleen A.
- Subjects
HEALTH promotion ,WELL-being ,COMMUNITY development ,PUBLIC health ,COMMUNITY health services ,SPINAL cord injuries ,PEER counseling ,PEER relations - Abstract
Background: The RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance) framework is a useful tool for evaluating the impact of programs in community settings. RE-AIM has been applied to evaluate individual programs but seldom used to evaluate the collective impact of community-based, public health programming developed and delivered by multiple autonomous organizations. The purposes of this paper were to (a) demonstrate how RE-AIM can be operationalized and applied to evaluate the collective impact of similar autonomous programs that promote health and well-being and (b) provide preliminary data on the collective impact of Canadian spinal cord injury (SCI) peer mentorship programs on the delivery of peer mentorship services.Methods: Criteria from all five RE-AIM dimensions were operationalized to evaluate multiple similar community-based programs. For this study, nine provincial organizations that serve people with SCI were recruited from across Canada. Organizations completed a structured self-report questionnaire and participated in a qualitative telephone interview to examine different elements of their peer mentorship program. Data were analyzed using summary statistics.Results: Having multiple indicators to assess RE-AIM dimensions provided a broad evaluation of the impact of Canadian SCI peer mentorship programs. Peer mentorship programs reached 1.63% of the estimated Canadian SCI population. The majority (67%) of organizations tracked the effectiveness of peer mentorship through testimonials and reports. Setting-level adoption rates were high with 100% of organizations offering peer mentorship in community and hospital settings. On average, organizations allocated 10.4% of their operating budget and 9.8% of their staff to implement peer mentorship and 89% had maintained their programming for over 10 years. Full interpretation of the collective impact of peer mentorship programs was limited as complete data were only collected for 52% of survey questions.Conclusions: The lack of available organizational data highlights a significant challenge when using RE-AIM to evaluate the collective impact of multiple programs that promote health and well-being. Although researchers are encouraged to use RE-AIM to evaluate the collective impact of programs delivered by different organizations, documenting limitations and providing recommendations should be done to further the understanding of how best to operationalize RE-AIM in these contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Quebec Rural Emergency Department Project: A Cross-Sectional Study of a Potential Two-Pronged Strategy in the Knowledge Transfer Process.
- Author
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Drouin, Mélodie-Anne, Fleet, Richard, Poitras, Julien, Archambault, Patrick, Chauny, Jean-Marc, Lévesque, Jean-Frédéric, Ouimet, Mathieu, Dupuis, Gilles, Tanguay, Alain, Simard-Racine, Geneviève, Gauthier, Josée, Tounkara, Fatoumata Korika, Gilbert, Marie-Hélène, and Légaré, France
- Subjects
RURAL health services ,PUBLIC health ,EMERGENCY medical services ,CROSS-sectional method ,KNOWLEDGE transfer - Abstract
Introduction: Health services research generates useful knowledge. Promotion of implementation of this knowledge in medical practice is essential. Prior to initiation of a major study on rural emergency departments (EDs), we deployed two knowledge transfer strategies designed to generate interest and engagement from potential knowledge users. The objective of this paper was to review: 1) a combined project launch and media press release strategy, and 2) a pre-study survey designed to survey potential knowledge users’ opinions on the proposed study variables. Materials and Methods: We evaluated the impact of the project launch (presentation at two conferences hosted by key stakeholders) and media press release via a survey of participants/stakeholders and by calculating the number of media interview requests and reports generated. We used a pre-study survey to collect potential key stakeholder’ opinions on the study variables. Results: Twenty-one of Quebec’s 26 rural EDs participated in the pre-study survey (81% participation rate). The press release about the study generated 51 press articles and 20 media request for interviews, and contributed to public awareness of a major rural research initiative. In the pre-study survey, thirteen participants (46%) mentioned prior knowledge of the research project. Results from the pre-study survey revealed that all of the potential study variables were considered to be relevant for inclusion in the research project. Respondents also proposed additional variables of interest, including factors promoting retention of human resources. Conclusions: The present study demonstrated the potential utility of a two-pronged knowledge transfer strategy, including a combined formal launch and press release, and a pre-study survey designed to ensure that the included variables were of interest to participants and stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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