Leading Quality Improvement: Essentials for Managers

This course is offered by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

In successful health care systems, managers play a vital role in meeting key strategic and improvement goals. The Institute for Healthcare Improvement's (IHI's) Leading Quality Improvement: Essentials for Managers uses innovative teaching methods to enhance engagement and deepen understanding of quality improvement to improve organizational efficiency, patient safety, and staff and patient experience.

  • Describe the skills, tools, and resources needed for mid-level managers to effectively lead quality improvement efforts at the local level.

  • Demonstrate how to link department-level improvement activities to the organization’s goals and overall strategic plan.

  • Apply approaches to quality planning, quality control, and quality improvement that can be used by mid-level managers to successfully partner with front-line staff and key stakeholders.

Throughout this virtual program, experts with a wealth of experience in improvement science, measurement, modeling, coaching, innovation, and making the business case for improvement will facilitate discussion about the key takeaways from the cases while teaching the skills managers need to excel in their jobs. 

Individual registration: $995 (USD) Groups of 3 or more: $846 per person (USD)

Details
Tuesday, June 9, 2026 - 14:00
16 weeks starting June 9
Cost: 
$995 (USD)
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location

Better Quality Through Better Measurement | Online Course with Coaching

This online course and coaching are offered by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

Measurement lies at the heart of quality improvement. Without the correct measurement tools, measure alignment, and clear operational definitions, QI professionals risk not only burdening their team with inefficient practices, but gathering poor data and drawing poor conclusions.

In this program, you will discover what quality measurement is and why it matters, how to set a clear and achievable aim, how to define a family of measures tightly linked to your aim, how to choose and collect the right data, and how to display and analyze your data in run and control charts to support improvement. You can bring your own improvement project or idea and apply course concepts, tools, and methods or choose from several case studies to use as you apply course learnings. You will benefit from online lessons, live webinars, case studies, coaching, and peer interaction.

# Learning Goals

After completing this course, participants will be able to:
  • Describe the concepts and methods of measurement for improvement

  • Apply the steps/tools in the quality measurement journey to a system you are improving

  • Design a family of measures 

  • Construct effective data collection plans that incorporate stratification and sampling methods

  • Design run and control charts to analyze data for improvement

  • Distinguish common and special cause variation in data 

 

Details
Thursday, April 16, 2026 - 13:45
6 weeks beginning April 16
Cost: 
$549 (USD)
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Online

From framework to action: Launching the HEC Health Equity Framework

This webinar is presented by Healthcare Excellence Canada (HEC)

Join us for the first webinar in the two-part HEC Health Equity Framework webinar series of the Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Virtual Learning Exchange. 

We’ll explore the co-development of HEC’s Health Equity Framework and how the framework’s actions can advance access to safe, high-quality care. Participants will gain an understanding of the guiding commitments behind the framework, its eight actions, and how individuals, teams, and organizations can create safer, more inclusive, and equitable care.

Details
Tuesday, March 3, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Location
Webinar

EXTRA Fellowship Open House

This open house is presented by Healthcare Excellence Canada

Join us for a virtual open house to learn more about EXTRA, Healthcare Excellence Canada’s (HEC’s) team-based leadership development program focused on helping leaders improve healthcare quality and safety. 

Explore how EXTRA supports leaders and teams in building their capacity to accelerate improvement, working on real-world improvement projects and turning improvement ideas into lasting change. You’ll also get a firsthand look at our coaching approach and can ask questions. 

HEC will offer EXTRA open houses in both English and French.

  • Open House (English): March 31, 2026, 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET
  • Open House (French): April 2, 2026, 12:00–1:00 p.m. ET

https://elink.clickdimensions.com/c/7/eyJhaSI6MTg4NjQzMTYsImUiOiJtZy1lbm...

Details
Tuesday, March 31, 2026 - 12:00
Thursday, April 2, 2026 - 12:00
March 31 (English) & April 2 (French), 12-1 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Location
Online

Health Care Across Contexts: Community Perspectives

This Community of Practice Call is presented by the Dr. Peter Centre and funded by the Public Health Agency of Canada.

# Session Details

Drawing on over two decades of work across Africa and Canada, this session explores lived experiences navigating healthcare systems and models of care, particularly for African, Caribbean, and Black communities. 

Glenda Tambudzai Muzenda will reflect on what works, what fall short, and why community-led, culturally competent approaches are essential to improving access, trust, and health outcomes. 

The session will highlight practical insights from HIV, GBV, and mental health programming and invite participants to think critically about how systems can better respond to community realities.

# Why Join

  • Gain insight into how healthcare systems and models of care are experienced on the ground by African, Caribbean, and Black communities. 
  • Explore practical lessons from HIV, mental health, and gender-based violence programming. 
  • Reflect on how community knowledge can inform more culturally competent, trauma-informed, and equitable approaches to care. 
  • Engage in shared learning with peers navigating similar system-level challenges.

Glenda Tambudzai Muzenda is a health equity leader and human rights advocate with over 20 years of experience in HIV programming, gender justice, and community-led health systems. Her work focuses on African, Caribbean, and Black communities and spans research, policy, and program leadership across Africa and Canada. She is a Desmond Tutu Global Fellowship recipient and holds a Master’s in Development Studies from Erasmus University Rotterdam.

# About the Dr. Peter Centre

The Dr. Peter Centre is a health care facility located in Vancouver, BC, dedicated to providing compassionate care and support to the "sidelined 2%". 

Approximately 750,000 Canadians living with complex, overlapping health and social challenges like HIV/AIDS, mental health challenges, substance use and homelessness.

As both a direct service provider and a national leader in frontline care, the Centre offers a safe and inclusive environment for healing and connection while sharing its model of care across Canada.

Details
Thursday, March 5, 2026 - 14:00
2:00-3:00 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Zoom

Building a Future for All: Connecting Age-Friendly Strategies to Emerging Priorities

This virtual conference is presented by the Centre for Studies in Aging & Health

The Canadian population is aging rapidly, making it imperative that our communities are ready to support the well-being and inclusion of older adults. As our collective attention is increasingly fragmented, we aim to:

  1. Highlight how age-friendly work fits into big picture conversations; and
  2. Enable attendees to strategically incorporate age-friendly talking points into their conversations.

Attendees will leave with a culture shift – an ability to leverage broader policy or structural level priorities to align with and further local age-friendly initiatives.

This event will integrate lived experience, research, and practice-based evidence to support age-friendly development. Additionally, there will be hands-on opportunities to build practical skills to support your own age-friendly work.

The event is intended for municipal staff, community leaders, people who work with older adults, policy makers, older adults, those in the age-friendly community and beyond.

Details
Tuesday, March 10, 2026 - 10:00
Wednesday, March 11, 2026 - 10:00
Thursday, March 12, 2026 - 10:00
March 10-12
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location

Mois de l’histoire des Noirs – Entretien avec Dr Akeem Stewart, responsable provincial en matière de santé et de bien-être des Noirs

Mois de l’histoire des Noirs – Entretien avec Dr Akeem Stewart, responsable provincial en matière de santé et de bien-être des Noirs
Date: 
Friday, February 13, 2026

Tout au long du Mois de l’histoire des Noirs, on peut souligner l’histoire, la culture et l’innovation des personnes de race noire. On peut aussi découvrir les réalisations et les contributions des Canadiennes et Canadiens de race noire à la vie dans ce pays et ailleurs, et apprendre des leçons importantes et l’histoire. En particulier pendant ce mois, mais aussi tous les autres jours, nous avons la chance d’apprendre l’histoire à travers des événements marquants qui témoignent de l’oppression et du racisme vécus par les Noirs au Canada, ainsi que leurs répercussions sur la santé des individus et des communautés noires.

Au Canada, depuis maintenant trente ans, le mois de février est officiellement reconnu comme étant le Mois de l’histoire des Noirs à l’échelle nationale. Cette année, le thème choisi par le gouvernement fédéral est « Le Mois de l’histoire des Noirs a 30 ans : honorons l’excellence des personnes noires au fil des générations, des bâtisseurs du pays aux visionnaires ». L’histoire des Noirs au Canada, de même que le Mois de l’histoire des Noirs, remonte à une époque antérieure à la motion déposée à la Chambre des communes en décembre 1995 par l’honorable Jean Augustine, la première femme noire canadienne élue au Parlement. Cette motion et celle déposée en 2008 par le sénateur Donald Oliver, le premier homme noir nommé au Sénat canadien, « visant à reconnaître les contributions de la population noire canadienne et le mois de février comme le Mois de l’histoire des Noirs », ont été adoptées à l’unanimité. Auparavant, des leaders, des historiens et des défenseurs des communautés noires ont passé des décennies à faire revivre l’histoire et les récits des Noirs, et à revendiquer la création de mois de l’histoire des Noirs à l’échelle régionale, en Ontario, à Toronto et ailleurs. Il s’agit d’une célébration et d’une occasion qui s’étendent sur un mois et qui ont exigé des décennies d’efforts. Le Mois de l’histoire des Noirs est réinventé chaque année, en prenant en considération le passé, le présent et l’avenir.

Alors que nous nous tournons vers l’avenir, il est crucial de renforcer la solidarité et la voix unique pour combattre le racisme, l’oppression et la discrimination systémique envers les personnes noires. Cela est d’autant plus important alors que notre présent est de plus en plus instable, régressif et marqué par des attitudes, des politiques et des changements systémiques racistes. Dans le domaine des soins de santé et des services sociaux, l’équité en matière de santé et les soins culturellement adaptés sont une question de vie ou de mort. Ils représentent une voie essentielle vers un avenir plus juste et plus équitable. À l’Alliance pour des communautés en santé, le Comité de la santé des Noirs est l’un des principaux moteurs de l’équité en matière de santé pour les personnes et les communautés noires en Ontario. Ce comité, formé de membres de l’Alliance qui collaborent avec des partenaires en santé des Noirs en Ontario et ailleurs au Canada, s’efforce de comprendre les besoins et les défis auxquels font face les personnes et les communautés noires. Il cherche à innover pour mieux servir les communautés africaines, caribéennes et noires de manière plus adaptée sur le plan culturel, et à mesurer les résultats et les impacts de ses actions.

L’Alliance a parlé à Dr Akeem Stewart, responsable provincial en matière de santé et de bien-être des Noirs, avant le Mois de l’histoire des Noirs, afin d’en savoir plus sur les actions actuellement menées pour améliorer la santé et le bien-être de la communauté noire, et de connaître les priorités du Comité de la santé des Noirs et de ses partenaires pour les prochains mois. Voici certains des points abordés lors de cet entretien :

Alliance : Alors que l’Ontario est en pleine démarche de transformation et d’expansion des équipes de soins primaires, pouvez-vous nous parler de l’importance, pour la santé des Noirs, de se concentrer sur les besoins locaux de la communauté et de mieux adapter sur le plan culturel le secteur des soins primaires, ses services et ses programmes?

Dr Stewart : Il est essentiel de réaliser l’importance des soins primaires, surtout dans le contexte de la communauté. Ces soins ne se résument pas à traiter un simple rhume. Ils forment une première ligne de défense en éduquant et en informant les patients sur le fait que certains changements dans leur mode de vie peuvent favoriser l’aspect préventif du bien-être. C’est la solution pour alléger la charge qui pèse sur les soins tertiaires et aigus du secteur des soins de santé. Il faut aller à la rencontre des communautés là où elles se trouvent. Il est important de s’assurer que notre travail est perçu de manière authentique et transparente, pour que la communauté puisse s’y identifier. C’est aussi pourquoi la communication est si importante. La communauté doit faire partie de ce que nous essayons de construire ensemble. Il faut tenir compte de l’opinion des gens, car nous ne pouvons pas bâtir quelque chose pour eux sans leur participation. La communauté est le cœur et le fondement des soins primaires; son appui est donc indispensable pour déterminer comment nous pouvons évoluer afin de mieux la servir.

 

Alliance : Pouvez-vous parler du travail que vous, le Comité de la santé des Noirs, ses membres et ses partenaires, avez accompli jusqu’à présent?

Dr Stewart : Lorsque vous commencez à voir précisément quelles sont les disparités en matière de santé et que vous comprenez la population avec laquelle vous communiquez et que vous traitez, certaines tendances deviennent manifestes. Que ce soit pour la santé des hommes noirs, la santé maternelle des femmes noires, la santé des personnes âgées noires ou pour toute autre question, des occasions se présentent pour discuter des soins préventifs et permettre aux gens de se rendre dans des endroits où ils se sentent en sécurité. Il est crucial d’aborder ces sujets avec un état d’esprit résilient, plutôt qu’avec un sentiment de déficit ou de manque. Imaginons que je doive aborder le sujet du cancer de la prostate et de la détection précoce avec quelqu’un. Je mettrai l’accent sur l’incidence de cette maladie, sur la manière dont nous, en tant qu’hommes, pouvons renforcer notre rôle dans notre famille en nous faisant dépister régulièrement, et sur le fait que cette maladie est guérissable. Je ne parlerais pas à quelqu’un du cancer de la prostate en lui disant : « Oh, j’ai eu un membre de ma famille qui est décédé et je ne voudrais pas que cela vous arrive. » Les deux phrases véhiculent le même message, mais l’une émane d’un discours alarmiste, et l’autre d’un discours d’autonomisation.

C’est le principe fondamental d’Ubuntu. Je suis parce que tu es. Cela devrait vous permettre de progresser et de ressentir ce sentiment d’appartenance que l’on trouve au sein de la communauté. C’est une solution à plusieurs problèmes. Une fois qu’une communauté est établie, vous bénéficiez d’un soutien sans limite de sa part, et vous êtes entouré de personnes avec qui vous pouvez aborder des sujets liés à la santé. Vous pouvez alors commencer à éliminer véritablement ces mythes, ces obstacles et ces idées reçues taboues concernant les conversations sur la santé, qui devraient vraiment être plus normalisées.

 

Alliance : Pouvez-vous parler du travail qui a été réalisé et qui est en cours pour lutter contre les iniquités en matière de santé auxquelles font face les personnes et les communautés par l’amélioration et l’adaptation de la prestation des soins primaires?

Dr Stewart : Le Groupe de sensibilisation à la drépanocytose de l’Ontario fait un excellent travail, et il est possible d’intervenir pour traiter cette maladie dans le cadre des soins primaires. Nous nous intéressons également au Réseau rénal de l’Ontario, qui s’assure que les personnes atteintes d’une maladie rénale chronique, qui font face à des disparités importantes en matière d’accès aux soins, reçoivent le traitement dont elles ont besoin. Cela va de la dialyse à la transplantation.

On constate que, de manière systémique, ils s’efforcent de pallier ces lacunes. Le problème est qu’elles sont nombreuses et qu’elles touchent divers aspects. Nous avons un manque de connaissances et de données sur la santé maternelle des femmes noires, malgré les efforts considérables pour y remédier. De plus, des lacunes importantes existent en matière de santé mentale des Noirs, en particulier chez les jeunes. Cette question est également abordée dans le remarquable travail du Centre de toxicomanie et de santé mentale (CAMH) ainsi que dans son programme AMANI. En effet, ce qu’ils ont mis en place est vraiment extraordinaire; le programme se concentre réellement sur les jeunes Noirs, et leur permet d’aborder ces sujets dans un lieu sûr. Il reste toutefois beaucoup de travail à faire pour étendre sa portée, mais, là où il est déjà mis en œuvre, les résultats sont jusqu’à présent très encourageants.

 

Alliance : Le Comité de la santé des Noirs collabore avec des étudiants en médecine et a mis en place un programme visant à présenter aux médecins noirs le Modèle de santé et de bien-être utilisé par les membres de l’Alliance. Comment cela se passe-t-il?

Dr Stewart : Très bien. À tel point que le programme a été élargi. Au lancement du programme, nous avions quatre ou cinq sites participants. L’année dernière, nous en comptions huit ou neuf au total. Au moins dix étudiants se sont inscrits au programme l’année dernière. Grâce au programme communautaire d’éducation et de promotion de la santé, nous donnons à des étudiants provenant de la culture noire l’occasion de découvrir les centres de santé communautaire, d’en connaître les activités visant à soigner les personnes de leur communauté, et d’en apprendre plus sur les soins primaires dans le domaine de la santé communautaire. Il est important d’insister sur la diversité dans notre secteur et de favoriser la représentation des médecins noirs qui entrent sur le marché du travail, en particulier dans le domaine des soins primaires.

 

Alliance : Quels sont les projets actuels du Comité de la santé des Noirs, et quel autre message aimeriez-vous transmettre au sujet de la santé des Noirs en ce début du Mois de l’histoire des Noirs en Ontario et dans l’ensemble du Canada?

Dr Stewart : Je pense que le plus important est que nous essayions vraiment de garantir la poursuite d’un effort global et que nous travaillions de manière collective. Nous voulons continuer à maintenir le niveau de transparence qui est essentiel à ce que représente le Comité de la santé des Noirs. Nous faisons vraiment tout notre possible pour que tous autour de nous puissent constater les résultats obtenus et les partenariats établis, et puissent dire : « OK, nous sommes prêts à nous impliquer, à dynamiser et à inspirer. » C’est notre objectif. En discutant du travail à tous les niveaux, nous avons la possibilité de nous unir et d’agir, et nous voulons nous assurer que nous restons en phase avec la communauté tout au long de cette démarche. La narration quantifiée nous permet d’exprimer notre point de vue dans des salles où nous ne serions peut-être pas assis. C’est là que nous souhaitons qu’elle soit. Nous pouvons ainsi raconter l’histoire, présenter les tendances, démontrer ce qui fonctionne ou non, et en expliquer l’impact concret sur nos communautés. La drépanocytose constitue un exemple remarquable de la manière dont le modèle a été adapté et appliqué à divers domaines. Toutefois, il y a encore beaucoup de possibilités de croissance.

Nous ne voulons pas nous reposer sur nos lauriers. Nous aspirons à poursuivre notre croissance pour être en mesure d’aider toutes les personnes. Nous ouvrons grand nos portes à l’ensemble de la population. Nous accueillons les communautés 2ELGBTQ+, qui comptent une importante population noire, ainsi que les communautés autochtones, qui comprennent également une communauté noire. Les nouveaux arrivants, la communauté francophone et les personnes en situation d’itinérance sont également bienvenues. Ces communautés comptent toutes une population noire. Il est donc important de comprendre que la santé sur laquelle nous nous concentrons ne concerne pas uniquement les personnes de race noire, mais aussi toutes les populations très prioritaires. Nous effectuons ce travail parce que nous sommes là pour donner des soins primaires aux personnes qui ont été stratégiquement marginalisées depuis plus de 400 ans, et pour offrir des soins adaptés sur le plan culturel à toutes les personnes.

 

Black History Month – Alliance Statement and Interview with Dr. Akeem Stewart, Provincial Lead Black Health and Wellness

Alliance for Healthier Communities graphic with text that reads: Celebrating Black History Month 2026: Our Statement and Interview with Provincial Black Health Lead Dr. Akeem Stewart
Date: 
Friday, February 13, 2026

Throughout Black History Month, there will be opportunities to celebrate Black history, culture and innovation, chances to learn about the achievements and contributions of Black Canadians to life in this country and beyond, and important lessons and history to learn. Especially during this month, but also every day, we have the chance to learn about history from the stark facts of oppression and the history of anti-Black racism here in Canada, and its ongoing impacts on Black people and communities and their health.

In Canada, it is a milestone year recognizing three decades officially marking Black History Month in February as a nation. The theme set out by the federal government this year is: “30 Years of Black History Month: Honouring Black Brilliance Across Generations — From Nation Builders to Tomorrow’s Visionaries.” Black history in Canada, and even Black History Month itself, predate the motion brought in the House of Commons in December 1995, made by the Honourable Jean Augustine, the first Black Canadian woman elected to Parliament. That motion, and the motion made in 2008 by Senator Donald Oliver, the first Black man appointed to Canada’s Senate, “to Recognize Contributions of Black Canadians and February as Black History Month” both passed unanimously. Black leaders, historians and community advocates spent decades before that bringing Black histories and stories to life, and advocating for regional Black History Months, in Ontario, Toronto and elsewhere. It is a month-long celebration and opportunity that was and is decades in the making. Black History Month is remade every year, with an eye on the past, present and future.

As we look ahead to the future, from a present that is increasingly unstable and often regressive and racist, in its attitudes, policies and system changes, we must continue to find ways to build on the solidarity and single voice used to speak out against anti-Black racism, oppression, and systemic discrimination. In health care and social services, ensuring health equity and culturally safe care is an issue of life and death, and a key path towards a more just and equitable future. At the Alliance for Healthier Communities, one of the key drivers of that path of health equity for Black people and communities in Ontario is the Black Health Committee. Made up of Alliance members working with Black health partners across Ontario and Canada, the Black Health Committee is striving to better understand the needs of Black people and communities, and the barriers they face, to innovate to serve African, Caribbean, Black communities better and in more culturally safe ways, and to measure the results and impacts.

The Alliance spoke with Dr. Akeem Stewart, Provincial Lead Black Health and Wellness, in advance of Black History Month, to get a deeper sense of the work being done right now to improve Black health and wellbeing, and where the focus of the Black Health Committee and its partners will be in the months ahead. Here are some of the highlights from our conversation:

Alliance: As Ontario is in the middle of a transformation and expansion of Primary Care teams, can you speak to the importance for Black health of focusing on the local needs of community, and tailoring Primary Care and its services and programs to be culturally safe?

Dr. Stewart: We have to understand that primary care is really important, especially when it comes to community. There is far more that goes into primary care than just seeing someone for a common cold. It is that first line of defence that educates and shows patients that changes to lifestyles can help with the preventative aspect of wellness. That is the cure to the heavy load of what is occurring at the tertiary and acute levels of health care. You have to reach communities where they’re at. It’s important to be sure that the visibility of what we’re doing is being seen through a lens that is honest and true that the community can relate with. This is also why communication is so important. The community has to be part of what we are trying to build together. We can't build something for people if we don’t have their input. The community is the heart and foundation of primary care, and their support is critical in determining how we step forward to be able to serve them better.

Alliance: Can you speak to some of the work that you and the Black Health Committee and its members and partners have undertaken so far?

Dr. Stewart: When you start to see exactly where the health disparities exist and understand the population that you’re engaging and communicating with, as well as treating, certain trends will become apparent. Whether it’s Black men’s health, Black maternal health, Black seniors’ health or otherwise, it gives you opportunities to start to create conversations when it comes to preventative care, and give people opportunities to come into places where they’re safe. It’s important to have these conversations from a space of resilience, but not from a space of lack. For example, if I need to speak to someone about prostate cancer and screening, I would speak about the importance of prostate cancer, how we can become stronger as men within the role, for our families, by making sure we get tested and not taken by a disease that is curable. But I wouldn’t speak to someone about prostate cancer and say, “Oh, I've had a family member who’s died and I wouldn't want that happen to you.” Both examples are conveying the same message, but one narrative comes from a place of fear-mongering, and the other from a place of empowerment.

That’s the principle that Ubuntu lies within. I am because you are. It’s supposed to empower you to be able to step forward and embrace that sense of togetherness that you find within community. That is the cure for a lot. Once we have community, you have unlimited access to the support it provides, and you have people around who you can have those health-related conversations with. Then you can start to really remove those myths, barriers, and taboo misconceptions from conversations about health that really and truly should be more normalized. 

Alliance: Can you speak to some of the work that’s been done and is being done to address health disparities faced by Black people and communities through better, more tailored primary care?

Dr. Stewart: There is the SCAGO (Sickle Cell Awareness Group of Ontario), who are doing fantastic work on sickle cell anemia and being able to treat it at a primary care level. We are also looking at the Ontario Renal Network, where they are focusing on making sure that Black people with chronic kidney disease, who we know face significant disparities accessing care, are getting the treatment that they need. This ranges from dialysis to transplants.

You can see systemically that they’re trying to address the gaps. The concern is that there are many, and they are multi-faceted. We have a gap in knowledge and data with Black maternal health, despite the copious efforts being done to address this. There are also still major gaps with Black mental health – especially with our youth. That’s also being addressed with the great work being done by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) and its AMANI program. They have built something special that is truly focused on Black youth, providing a safe space to have these conversations. However, there’s still a lot of opportunity to make it more widespread, but in the areas where they are doing it, it’s been seeing really great results so far.

Alliance: The Black Health Committee is engaged with medical students, and a program to introduce Black physicians to the Model of Health and Wellbeing that is used by Alliance members. How’s that work going?

Dr. Stewart: It’s been really good. So much so it’s been expanded, actually. We have four or five participating sites when the program first launched. As of last year we are up to eight or nine sites total. We had at least 10 students enrolled in the program last year as well. With the community health education program, we’re allowing students of Black culture to come into community health centres and see the work that’s being done to treat those of their community and learn about primary care at the level of community health. It’s important to be focused on diversity in our sector, and championing that representation of Black doctors coming through the pipeline, especially into primary care.

Alliance: What is ahead for the Black Health Committee right now, and what other message would you like to send about Black Health at the beginning of Black History Month across Ontario and Canada?

Dr. Stewart: I think the biggest thing is that we are really trying to ensure that a continued holistic effort is put forward and that we work as a collective. We want to continue to maintain the standard of transparency that is critical to what the Black Health Committee is. We’re really trying to make sure that everyone around us can look at the work being done and the partnerships being formed and say, “OK, we’re ready to get involved and invigorate and inspire.” That is what we want to do. With the work that is being discussed at all different levels, we have a special opportunity to come together and put that into action, and we want to make sure that we stay aligned with the community while we do this. The quantitative narrative is allowing us to speak in rooms where we may not be seated. That's where we want it to sit. So we can tell the story, show the trends, what works, what doesn't work – and how it is really making a difference in our communities. Sickle cell is a great example of that, how they took the model and went across many, many different areas. But it still has a lot of opportunity to grow. 

We don't want to get comfortable. We want to continue to keep growing to make sure that we can serve everybody. We’re opening the door for the population – the whole population. We’re talking about 2SLGBTQ+ communities; within that, there’s a Black population. We’re talking about the Indigenous communities; within that, there’s a Black population. We’re also talking about newcomers, Francophones, people experiencing homelessness. They all have a Black population. So, this is important to understand that the health that we are focusing on is not just Black; it stretches across every single high-priority population. We’re doing this work because we’re here to provide primary care for those who’ve been strategically marginalized for over 400 years, to ensure culturally safe care for all.

Lunch & Learn: Gender-Affirming Care for Youth

This event is presented by the Alliance for Healthier Communities 

We live in a gender-diverse world and youth are no different. From a healthcare perspective, providing gender-affirming care is not a choice; it is essential for all people. Many primary care teams feel that they lack the expertise or knowledge to perform gender-affirming care, but most of the services that 2SLGBTQIA+ youth need to access are primary care services. Gender-affirming care can be freely provided to all youth safely with the right tools. This is the message our guest, Dr. Ian Johnston, Consulting Pediatrician at Chatham-Kent Community Health Centre, wants all primary care providers to hear. Gender-affirming care for youth is safe and routine primary care, and they can be providing it, too.

Join us for the first 2026 Lunch & Learn from the Alliance’s 2SLGBTQIA+ Advisory Committee where you will hear from a physician on the ground who provides gender-inclusive care to youth. During this hour-long session, you will hear highlights of the clinic, details on the types of patients seeking care, and why Dr. Johnston believes everyone can provide gender-inclusive care. There will be an opportunity for attendees to ask questions after the presentation.

Details
Thursday, March 5, 2026 - 11:30
11:30 am - 12:30 pm
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location

Public Health and Collaborative Governance in Extreme Heat Response: Evidence from Canadian Provinces and Urban Centers

This hybrid event is presented by the Collaborative Centre for Climate, Health & Sustainable Care at the University of Toronto as part of their Climate & Health Seminar Series

Join the Collaborative Centre for Climate, Health & Sustainable Care and the North American Observatory on Health Systems and Policies (NAO) for our upcoming seminar, Public Health and Collaborative Governance in Extreme Heat Response: Evidence from Canadian Provinces and Urban Centers featuring Dr. Sara Allin, Director of the NAO and Associate Professor of Health Policy, at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, at the University of Toronto.

This presentation will share results from a CIHR-funded project exploring the governance of heat responses in Canada, with two parts: first, a scoping review of the academic and grey literature to characterize the roles of public health authorities in climate action, with a focus on extreme heat in three provinces (British Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec); and, second, a qualitative comparative case study with interviews with key stakeholders to identify and assess governance mechanisms supporting collaborative action on extreme heat in three cities (Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal). Implications for public health authorities and their role in climate action, and broader climate resilience, will be discussed.

Details
Wednesday, April 1, 2026 - 12:00
12-1 pm (virtual), 12-2 pm (in person)
Cost: 
Free
Internal/External: 
Event Type: 
Location
Hybrid Event (Zoom, University of Toronto)
Toronto, ON