Community Engagement: From Debate to Dialogue.

This workshop is presented by the Tamarack Institute.

Teams and individuals who work with communities are experiencing significant changes in how they do community engagement. There is a growing sense of polarization, intolerance, and hate, which can cause significant harm, fear and can reduce the desire for people to work together.

On February 12, join Tamarack's Consulting Director of Community Engagement, Lisa Attygalle, to enhance your ability to create spaces for healthy dialogue in her popular 3-hour virtual workshop Community Engagement: From Debate to Dialogue

# Learning Objectives

Diverse perspectives are important for solution-making, and finding ways to break the divide are necessary at the local level if we want to find ways of moving forward.

Attend this event to:

  • Learn techniques and tools to help you navigate polarization in real time when facilitating engagement.
  • Create shared realities (or shared language) between those holding different perspectives and increase the chances of healthy dialogue.
  • Consider how to build relationships and reduce barriers to engagement.
  • Frame polarized situations to create the conditions to move from debate to dialogue.
  • Increase your knowledge of consensus-based and dialogue practices.

Learners will walk away with an understanding of the current trends in community engagement, the confidence to overcome barriers and create spaces for inclusive engagement, the ability to foster spaces for healthy dialogue, and the tools to develop your understanding of dialogue-based practices.

Registrants also receive access to Workshop Pre-Learning Resources and a 1-Hour Group Coaching Session. 

Details
Thursday, February 12, 2026 - 13:00
1:00-4:00 pm
Cost: 
$275
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Virtual event

​​Seeing the System: Identifying Gaps and Barriers in Structural Health Determinants

This anti-racism and cultural competency workshop is presented by Women's Health in Women's Hands Community Health Centre (WHIWH CHC)

Structural racism in healthcare continues to harm racialized women —especially African, Caribbean, and Black women.

From pain being dismissed to life-saving care being delayed, these experiences are not rare or isolated. They reflect a broader pattern of systemic racism and gaps in clinical training that disproportionately affect people with darker skin tones.

Through the We Matter Project and the Thrive Together Project, WHIWH CHC is working to raise awareness and support community-led solutions that promote equity, accountability, and improved care.

Join WHIWH for an interactive workshop designed specifically for health and service providers. This session focuses on practical tools, real-life case studies, and meaningful reflection to support culturally safe and anti-oppressive practice.

# What to expect

  • Engaging facilitation
  • Real-life case studies
  • Practical tools you can apply immediately
  • Space to connect and network with peers
  • Special guest speaker and interactive activities

📍 Central YMCA, 20 Grosvenor Street 🎤 Facilitator: Shanice Harris 📸 Learn more on Instagram: @wematter.whiwh

Have questions? Reach out to mame@whiwh.com

You can also support this work by joining WHIWH's public awareness campaign—share this post and help amplify the message in your communities.

Together, we can push for accountability and equity in healthcare.

 

Details
Thursday, February 19, 2026 - 17:00
5:00-9:00 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Central YMCA
20 Grosvenor Street
Toronto, ON M5A 2T4

OH Menopause Quality Standard Community of Practice

This Community of Practice session is presented by Ontario Health

At the Menopause Quality Standard Community of Practice learning sessions, you can expect a comprehensive learning experience with presentations from experts on various aspects of menopause care and from clinicians and team members on their implementation work.  

At this upcoming session, Dr. Susan Goldstein will be discussing menopause care and more specifically the MQ6 Menopause Management Tools. There will be opportunities for open discussion and Q&A sessions with peers to share experiences and exchange ideas! 

Details
Tuesday, February 3, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location

Leveraging Digital Tools for Quality Improvement

This webinar is presented by Ontario Health.

Discover how digital tools can drive quality improvement in primary care, ease administrative workload, and enhance patient outcomes. Hear directly from primary care teams actively integrating digital solutions in their practices as they share their experiences, including both challenges and successes, on their journey toward digitalization. 

This session is open to all care professionals advancing quality improvement – primary care providers, clinicians, administrators, and members of inter-professional and multi-disciplinary teams. 

This 1-credit-per-hour Group Learning program has been certified by the College of Family Physicians of Canada and the Ontario Chapter for up to 1.0 Mainpro+Ⓡ credits.

A recording of the session and news about upcoming sessions will be available on the Primary Care Quality Improvement Hub on Quorum. Please register and subscribe for the group here.

Details
Tuesday, February 10, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

H.E.A.L. Healthcare: Hearts-based Education and Anticolonial Learning in Healthcare

This webinar is presented by the National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health.

This webinar will engage participants in anti-bias training using anticolonial arts-based learning tools available from the H.E.A.L. Healthcare website – HEALhealthcare.ca. H.E.A.L. Healthcare, a project completed in collaboration with the National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health, was created in response to gaps identified in healthcare education. The website hosts over 30 individual curricula that address personal biases in healthcare, and were created by artists, Indigenous storytellers, and people with lived experience. In the webinar, the facilitators will introduce the project and website, then work through two of the curricula with participants. Through an anticolonial lens, participants will be invited to engage in active listening, write poetry, and reflect on their own personal biases.

# Learning objectives

  • Explore resources on the H.E.A.L. Healthcare website.
  • Understand arts-based learning as an effective way of decolonizing practice.
  • Identify personal biases and reflect on transformation through arts-based exercises.  

# Learning resource

This webinar will include working through two resources from the HEALhealthcare.ca website. To prepare for the webinar, participants are asked to:

  • Have blank paper, pen, colouring pens/pencils/markers for the webinar
  • Review the following resources ahead of the webinar:

# Presenters

Dr. Sarah de Leeuw, a creative writer and human geographer, is a Professor and Canada Research Chair (Humanities and Health Inequities) with the University of Northern British Columbia’s (UNBC) Northern Medical Program (NMP), the Faculty of Medicine at the University of British Columbia (UBC). Between 2012 and 2020, she held a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Career Investigator Scholar with the National Collaborating Centre for Indigenous Health (NCCIH) where she has been a Research Associate for more than a decade. Her academic research—funded by CIHR, SSHRC, and MSFHR, focuses on health inequalities, creative arts and critical humanities, marginalized geographies, colonial violence, and Indigenous peoples. Her research appears in more that 140 scholarly and creative publications. Author or co-editor of eleven books, including creative works nominated for Canada’s Governor General’s Literary Prize (Where it Hurts) and awarded the Dorthey Livesay BC Book Award (Geographies of a Lover), de Leeuw is also a two time recipient of a CBC Literary Prize for non-fiction and holds a Western Magazine Gold Award. In recognition of her outstanding interdisciplinary contributions across the country and beyond, de Leeuw was appointed in 2017 to The Royal Society of Canada, the College of New Scholars Artists and Scientists. She grew up on Haida Gwaii, completed high school on Ts’msyen lands in Terrace, and now divides her time between Lheidli T’enneh/Dakelh Territory (Prince George) and Syilx Territory (Okanagan Centre), in so called British Columbia.

X’staam Hana’ax (Nicole Halbauer), is a dedicated member of the Ts’msyen community, Kitsumkalum, and belongs to the Ganhada p’teex (clan) of the Waap (House) of K’oom. With over a decade of advocacy work in northern British Columbia, Nicole has been a strong advocate for decolonized governance in community organizations. She has held significant leadership roles, including Chair of the Board of Governors at Coast Mountain College, Vice Chair of BC Assessment, and various other provincial and community positions. Beyond her professional endeavors, Nicole is deeply committed to her family, raising six children and cherishing her four grandchildren. Her personal experiences shape her work, with a strong belief that reconciliation is essential to the health and well-being of a community.

 Michelle Roberge lives with her family tucked away in the trees on a beautiful west facing hill within the traditional territories of Saik’uz Whut’en, in north-central British Columbia, Canada. Here, when not working her day job(s), she grows food with her husband and children on their off-grid farm. Inspired by her childhood of catching (trying to catch) fish on the ocean and lakes of Vancouver Island, Michelle pursued a Bachelor of Science degree in Ecology and Environmental Biology at UBC and immediately followed it with a Master of Science degree in Zoology. Although Michelle started her working life as a fisheries biologist, her life and career has led her down many different and intersecting paths and experiences working in graphic design, health, education, agriculture, and anti-racism awareness. Michelle joined the HARC team to support the HEALhealthcare.ca project as the digital archivist and designer.

Details
Tuesday, January 20, 2026 - 14:30
2:30-4:00 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar

Sickle Cell Disease Community of Practice Webinar: Early Successes and Solution Sharing With Newly Funded Dedicated SCD Centres

This webinar is hosted by Ontario Health as an activity of their Sickle Cell Disease Community of Practice

Health care teams who provide care to people with sickle cell disease (SCD) are invited to join our next Sickle Cell Disease Community of Practice webinar on January 21 from 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. The session will focus on Early Successes and Solution Sharing With Newly Funded Dedicated SCD Centres. Additionally, this session will provide recommendations and guidance that other newly funded centres could learn from.  

Target audience: Primary care and specialist clinicians, community care clinicians, clinicians and administrators from dedicated SCD centres, emergency department clinicians, hospital leaders and administrators, quality improvement and equity specialists, and clinical educators involved in providing care to people with SCD (and their families and care partners).

# Presenters

Dr. Ian Zenlea | Medical Director and Division Head of Children’s Health, Clinician Scientist & Lead, Family and Child Health Initiative, Trillium Health Partners

Dianne Fierheller | Registered Nurse, Humber River Hospital

Kyla Chepelsky | Clinical Nurse Educator, Emergency Services Program, North York General Hospital 

# About the Sickle Cell Disease Community of Practice

On May 15, 2024, Ontario Health launched a Sickle Cell Disease Community of Practice. Its goal is to create a group that will champion improvements to the quality of care that people with SCD receive across all care settings in Ontario, by implementing the Sickle Cell Disease quality standard.

The community of practice is hosted in an online space on Quorum. This space includes a discussion forum, a document library with tools and resources, and a member directory for networking with other health care teams doing work related to SCD. The community of practice holds regular interactive webinars focusing on topics and content streams that are relevant to the entire community, or to subgroups.

Join the Sickle Cell Disease Community of Practice.

Details
Wednesday, January 21, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location

From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation | 3: StrategEase tool (Part 2)

This webinar is presented by the Centre for Implementation as part of their series "From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation."

This 2-part webinar from the Centre for Implementation is the demonstrates the NEW version of the StrategEase tool shows you how to select evidence-informed change strategies that directly address your identified barriers and facilitators, using theories and frameworks. Part 2 focuses on contextual barriers and facilitators mapped to the Context Compass Framework. (Learn about Part 1 here.)

# #About the Series

From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation (link is external)is a series of six one-hour learning events from the Centre for Implementation (TCI). Each of the first five events will demonstrate one TCI tool with real-world examples and interactive activities, and the sixth event will feature a panel of changemakers who will share how they have used different tools in practice. Register for the series to receive reminder emails about all events in the series, as well as recordings. You are not required to attend every event. 

Details
Thursday, May 14, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Online

From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation | 2: StrategEase tool (Part 1)

This webinar is presented by the Centre for Implementation as part of their series "From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation."

This 2-part webinar from the Centre for Implementation is the demonstrates the NEW version of the StrategEase tool shows you how to select evidence-informed change strategies that directly address your identified barriers and facilitators, using theories and frameworks. Part 1 focuses on focuses on individual-level barriers and facilitators mapped to the Capability, Opportunity, Motivation - Behavior (COM-B) theory and Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF). (Learn about Part 2 here). 

# About the Series

From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation is a series of six one-hour learning events from the Centre for Implementation (TCI). Each of the first five events will demonstrate one TCI tool with real-world examples and interactive activities, and the sixth event will feature a panel of changemakers who will share how they have used different tools in practice. Register for the series to receive reminder emails about all events in the series, as well as recordings. You are not required to attend every event. 

Details
Thursday, March 12, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Online

From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation | 1: Cultiv8 Tool

This webinar is presented by the Centre for Implementation as part of their series "From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation."

Cultiv8 tool equips you with actionable strategies to help you build trust and navigate power dynamics at both the individual and organizational level.

# About the Series

From Insight to Action: Tools that Support Implementation is a series of six one-hour learning events from the Centre for Implementation (TCI). Each of the first five events will demonstrate one TCI tool with real-world examples and interactive activities, and the sixth event will feature a panel of changemakers who will share how they have used different tools in practice. Register for the series to receive reminder emails about all events in the series, as well as recordings. You are not required to attend every event. 

Details
Thursday, January 22, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Online

Launch Webinar for new Common QIP Indicator: Number of New Clients

This event is presented by the Alliance for Healthier Communities

This QIP season, the Alliance is introducing a new Common QIP Indicator for our sector: "Number of New Clients/Patients." 

This new indicator will replace "Client Involvement in Decisions about their Care," which Ontario Health discontinued in 2025. It was chosen by Alliance members through the EPIC Learning Health System Steering Committee, and their technical specifications were developed in partnership with the Improvers Working Group. 

Alliance members are encouraged to make the new indicator a priority in their 2026-27 QIPs. This will support our members in adopting a quality improvement mindset in their efforts to increase primary care access and address attachment challenges in their communities, and it will demonstrate our sector's leadership in addressing the challenges facing our health system. This indicator is aligned with Ontario Health's 2026 priority QIP indicators for 2026-27 and with the broader health system's objective of achieving full attachment to team-based primary care. 

Join us as we provide an orientation to the new indicator. We will discuss the technical specifications, how to access the data, and how to manage client data in your EMR to ensure good data quality.

Details
Tuesday, February 10, 2026 - 11:00
11:00 am - 12:00 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Webinar