Thirst-quenching conversation: Evaluation and reporting in health promotion

This webinar is presented by the Alliance for Healthier Communities with guests from Transform Practice.

Evaluation does not need to be alienating and boring! Join us for an invigorating dialogue with coauthors of this recent EPIC News feature and  research article. This webinar is open to all; however, it will be of particular interest to health promotion staff, managers, and community members as well as scholars with an interest in health promotion and community-based evaluation.

# Join us to: 

  • Peek into participatory approaches that favour deeper community relationships and reciprocity.
  • Remind yourself that joyful community engagements enhance team effectiveness.
  • Discuss how evaluation choices impact your team’s healthy equity goals, and community accountabilities.
  • Recharge your strategy for negotiating top-down funder requirements. 

This event will include plenary conversations and breakouts.

Note: In order to ensure a safe space for discussion, this webinar will not be recorded. However, a written summary will be shared with all participants.

# Presenters

Gillian Kranias (They/She) has contributed to dozens of equity-centered community development, community planning, and systems change initiatives. Each was stronger from investments in collaborative, creative, and participatory evaluative learning activities. Gillian is proud author of two practical, accessible resources on participatory evaluation: The Power of Reflection, and Participatory Evaluation Toolkit. Gillian’s foundations are an MES in Community-based Organizing for Environmental and Social Change and over three decades of ‘learning through action’ alongside powerful leaders from diverse equity-seeking communities. Today, they contribute to change as a co-director with Transform Practice Cooperative and as Manager, Learning and Evaluation at the Canadian Women’s Foundation. 

Julia Fursova, PhD (She/They), School of Leadership Studies, UNB, is an academic partner, co-director, and co-founder with Transform Practice not-for-profit co-op. Julia is a community-engaged scholar whose research program has been influenced by their lived experience as an immigrant, continuous dialogue with community members and a commitment to anti-oppression and decolonization in research and action. Julia’s previous roles in CHCs include community engagement worker (Lawrence Heights CHC, Toronto), health promoter and case coordinator (Unison HCS, Toronto), and Guys Can Cook! Project Co-ordinator (Four Villages CHC, Toronto). Most recently, Julia worked as a consultant supporting a participatory evaluation of Black-Focused Social Prescribing program with CHCs.

Details
Tuesday, January 20, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

Peers, Power, and Potential: Transforming FASD Support Through Strength-Based Interventions

This webinar is presented by Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder Ontario.

This free, live webinar will share findings from a peer-led support group in Waterloo Region, Ontario, designed for and by youth ages 12–17 with FASD. The support group aimed to enhance self-esteem, socialization, and coping skills. Eight adolescents participated in strengths-based sessions, fostering belonging and confidence. Key themes included peer connections, supportive facilitation, and leadership opportunities. Participants reported improved self-esteem, social skills, and behavior. The session will provide qualitative insights and recommendations for expanding peer-led models, emphasizing the value of shifting from deficits to strengths in supporting adolescents with FASD. 

Details
Tuesday, January 13, 2026 - 13:00
1:00 - 2:00 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

Why Do I Feel This Way? Understanding Grief in Dementia Caregiving

This webinar is presented by the Alzheimer Society of Ontario

Do simple tasks feel overwhelming? Do you feel isolated? Angry? Unexpectedly emotional? You’re not alone. Alongside the physical demands, caregivers often face complex emotions tied to grief and loss. This webinar, hosted with The Alzheimer Society of Ontario, will explore how these feelings manifest and how you can manage them.

Details
Thursday, January 8, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

Cultural Perspectives on Caregiving: Stories of Strength & Support

This webinar is presented by the Ontario Caregiver Organization in collaboration with Indus Community Services, and The Region of Peel Senior Services Development.

How is caregiving experienced across different cultures? Hear first-hand from a caregiver in the Punjabi community. Hosted in collaboration with Indus Community Services, and The Region of Peel Senior Services Development, this webinar will leave you with deeper understanding of the cultural values and norms that shape caregiving perspectives. 

Details
Thursday, December 11, 2025 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

The Indigenous Roots of Harm Reduction - Delinking Western Centrality in Harm Reduction

This event is presented by Nalgona Positivity Pride

This presentation examines the Indigenous foundations of harm reduction and shows how current health frameworks often overlook the deep histories that shaped this work. It draws primarily from teachings on Turtle Island while acknowledging that relational care has long existed across many Indigenous and colonized societies. These stories are shared to support reflection about how harm is defined, how care is practiced, and how repair is carried through time.

 
Details
Tuesday, December 16, 2025 - 19:30
Thursday, February 5, 2026 - 19:30
7:30 pm
Cost: 
$33.00 USD
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

The Canoe Project: Holiday Blues from an Indigenous Perspective

This webinar is presented by Communities, Alliances, and Networks (CAAN) and the Dr. Peter Centre.

CAAN Communities, Alliances & Networks and Dr. Peter Center are delighted to invite you to another virtual Community of Practice (CoP) Call on Indigenous-led trauma informed Harm Reduction training. This training is part of the national project, The Canoe and is free to attend. The Canoe aims to bring relevant, non-stigmatizing, context specific harm reduction practices for indigenous communities to the national stage. 

This call will be held virtually and will focus on Holiday Blues from an Indigenous Perspective. 

The facilitator for this session is Elder Susan Powell (Lakota), a mother & grandmother, has been a Holistic Health Educator and Wellness Facilitator for 45 years. She has been invited to offer Medicine Circle workshops and a variety of seminar topics for conferences and diverse communities, including child & youth care workers, educators, social workers, mentoring agencies, Aboriginal Youth Leadership, the Native American Sports Council, and the Justice Institute of British Columbia, as well as on reserve for First Nations communities across Canada.

Details
Friday, December 12, 2025 - 14:00
2-3 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

WHIWH CHC Event | Breaking Barriers, Building Bridges – Community Action Against HIV/AIDS

This community event is presented by Women's Health in Women's Hands CHC (WHIWH CHC)

Event flyer with list of activities, date, time, location, and QR code for registration. Click to enlarge.
Event flyer - Click to enlarge

Please join us for this year’s World AIDS Day event, hosted in partnership with Women’s College Hospital, Africans in Partnership Against AIDS, and CANFAR, and proudly sponsored by GILEAD.

It’s going to be a powerful day of learning, storytelling, creativity, and collective action as we honour people living—and those who have lived—with HIV, engage in collective action to end HIV, and celebrate our collective efforts.

We’re bringing the full community experience, including:

  • Video screening

  • Educational sessions

  • Interactive dialogue

  • Art & poetry

  • Fun prizes

Food, refreshments, TTC PRESTO tickets, and childcare reimbursement will be provided.

For more information, please contact Rose Njeri at 647-355-9110 or rose@whiwh.com

Details
Monday, December 1, 2025 - 09:00
9:00 am - 2:30 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
WHIWH CHC
2 Carlton St., 5th Floor
Toronto, ON M5B 1J3

Partnering with People with Lived Experience to Enable Person-Centered Integrated Care

This webinar is presented by the International Foundation for Integrated Care (IFIC) Canada

Across Canada, people with lived experience are leading transformative work in integrated care. From national networks to research partnerships, this leadership is creating the infrastructure needed for genuine co-design and shared decision-making. Healthcare systems increasingly recognize the importance of involving people with lived experience, and many are doing more of this work than ever before. What's emerging now is the shift from involvement to authentic partnership where power is genuinely shared.

Moving from consultation to authentic partnership requires systems to change how they operate, not just how they engage. It means confronting power dynamics, investing time in building trust and relationships, and creating conditions where people can participate fully as co-leaders, not just advisors.

This session brings together people with lived experience, researchers, and system leaders to explore what authentic partnership looks like in practice, what it takes to sustain it, and how to build on the transformative leadership already happening across the country. Join us to learn and unlearn together, connecting with others working toward integrated care that's genuinely shaped by the people it serves.

Details
Tuesday, December 9, 2025 - 12:00
12:00-1:30pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location

RHO In Conversation: Navigating Racism and Transphobia in Healthcare

This event is presented by Rainbow Health Ontario.

We are proud to announce this vital conversation, held in honour of Trans Day of Remembrance. Join us for a discussion on navigating racism and transphobia within health care, intended for all healthcare and social service workers and students in these fields.

Featuring Dr. Jordan Goodridge and Ronnie Ali, RP, this conversation will explore how systemic racism and transphobia intersect in clinical settings, creating gaps in care, fostering medical mistrust and leading to disproportionately poorer health outcomes for trans and gender-diverse people of colour. We will invite participants to reflect on their own practices, examine how established clinical norms can contribute to inequity and explore actionable strategies to unlearn these harmful patterns and move toward a more equitable and affirming health-care system for all.

Details
Tuesday, November 25, 2025 - 12:00
12:00-1:30pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location

Les soins d’affirmation de genre doivent être accessibles à tous. Sans ces soins, des vies sont en danger.

Date: 
Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Les soins d’affirmation de genre doivent être accessibles à tous. Sans ces soins, des vies sont en danger.

Chaque personne, quel que soit son âge, a droit à des soins d’affirmation de genre. Cependant, au Canada, ce droit est actuellement menacé pour certaines personnes, comme les jeunes et la population 2SLGBTQ+, ce qui met aussi leur santé en péril.

Chaque individu a le droit de recevoir des soins de santé qui tiennent compte de sa culture et qui sont centrés sur la personne. Ce droit aux soins permet de sauver des vies et d’aider les personnes qui font face à des obstacles à survivre et à s’épanouir. Ce droit inclut l’accès à des soins d’affirmation de genre, y compris le soutien à la transition, pour les personnes qui s’identifient comme transgenres. Le Canada présente des taux élevés d’intimidation (77%) chez les jeunes de la diversité sexuelle et de genre, et les soins d’affirmation de genre sont nécessaires pour remédier aux problèmes de santé mentale qui touche cette population. Les taux élevés d’intimidation et la santé mentale plus précaire contribuent également à un taux d’idées suicidaires cinq fois plus élevé chez les jeunes transgenres que chez leurs pairs cisgenres; leur taux de tentatives de suicide est 7,6 fois plus élevé (Suicidality among sexual minority and transgender adolescents: a nationally representative population-based study of youth in Canada | CMAJ).

Dans ce contexte, il est décourageant de constater que deux provinces canadiennes, l’Alberta et la Colombie-Britannique, ont adopté des mesures pour restreindre les soins d’affirmation de genre destinés à leurs jeunes. Ces changements politiques incluent notamment le refus de prescrire des inhibiteurs de puberté. Ces médicaments essentiels retardent l’apparition des changements hormonaux, offrant ainsi aux jeunes transgenres et en questionnement de genre plus de temps pour réfléchir et examiner leurs options avant de prendre des décisions irréversibles concernant leur corps. Il en revient aux médecins ou au personnel infirmier praticien de décider du traitement approprié en concertation avec leur patient. D’autres formes de soutien à la transition sont menacées, comme le droit des jeunes de changer de nom ou de pronoms à l’école. En interdisant l’accès à ces services, on augmente les risques pour les jeunes, qui sont souvent déjà en situation de grande vulnérabilité.

Une préoccupation majeure dans le débat actuel est le déni du soutien à la transition comme élément important d’un éventail plus large de soins centrés sur la personne et d’affirmation de genre. D’autres formes de soins d’affirmation de genre, adaptées à d’autres groupes démographiques, sont largement disponibles et généralement acceptées, sans susciter de controverse. Des exemples en sont l’augmentation ou la réduction mammaire, l’hormonothérapie substitutive pendant la préménopause et la ménopause, ou encore les interventions pour les personnes souffrant de perte de cheveux, de baisse de libido ou de dysfonctionnement sexuel. Ces interventions ne suscitent pas le même débat public, puisqu’elles ne sont pas associées à la stigmatisation, à la désinformation, à la peur ni à la haine, contrairement aux soins pour les personnes transgenres.

Nous applaudissons les médecins et les dirigeants du système de santé canadien qui ont sonné l’alarme concernant les politiques qui limitent l’accès aux décisions en matière de soins de santé prises par les médecins traitants ou le personnel infirmier praticien et leur patient ou client. Ils ont clairement exprimé leur appui à des soins de transition abordables, sécuritaires et immédiats, en particulier pour les jeunes et les membres de la communauté 2SLGBTQ+. Ces professionnels de la santé qualifiés prennent très au sérieux leur obligation de diligence envers les jeunes du Canada, et ils s’opposent fermement et solidairement aux attaques visant les soins d’affirmation de genre offerts aux jeunes transgenres. En 2024, l’Association médicale canadienne a déclaré son opposition aux politiques qui restreindraient l’accès aux soins d’affirmation de genre. De son côté, l’Ontario Medical Association a demandé que ces soins soient considérés comme prioritaires, les qualifiant de « vitaux , et Santé Ontario a publié des normes de qualité spécifiques aux soins d’affirmation de genre pour les personnes de diverses identités de genre.

Dans l’ensemble de l’Ontario, des initiatives locales mettent ces déclarations audacieuses en pratique. En voici quatre exemples :

 

Malgré ces excellents exemples, cela ne suffit pas. En Ontario, les délais d’attente pour les soins d’affirmation de genre sont encore très longs, et l’opposition à ces soins y est toujours présente. Il est crucial de ne pas laisser la désinformation, la peur et la stigmatisation dominer le discours sur les soins primaires fondés sur des preuves pour les jeunes et la communauté 2SLGBTQ+, en particulier pour les personnes transgenres. Ceux qui prétendent se mobiliser « pour les enfants » cherchent en réalité à mettre en place des réformes politiques qui, comme nous le savons, et comme le montrent les études, seront préjudiciables aux enfants et aux jeunes. Chaque individu devrait déterminer ses propres besoins en matière de soins de santé en collaboration avec son médecin ou son infirmier praticien ou son infirmière praticienne.

À l’occasion de la Journée du souvenir trans, qui aura lieu le 20 novembre, et des 16 jours d’activisme contre la violence basée sur le genre qui suivront, il est important de se souvenir et de rappeler à tout le monde, y compris aux décideurs politiques, que :

Les soins destinés aux personnes transgenres sont des soins d’affirmation de genre, et ces soins d’affirmation de genre sont des soins primaires. Chaque personne a droit à ces soins, et leur refus met en péril des vies, y compris celles des enfants.