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.

Détails
le Mardi 25 Novembre 2025 - 12:00
12:00-1:30pm
Coût : 
Free
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement

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

Date: 
le Mardi 18 Novembre 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.

 

Gender Affirming Care Must Be Accessible to All. Without it, Lives Are at Risk

Date: 
le Mardi 18 Novembre 2025

Everyone has the right to gender affirming care, at any age. But for some people in Canada, including youth and 2SLGBTQ+ populations, that right is at risk right now, and so people’s health is at risk as well. 

Everyone is entitled to culturally safe, person-centred care when receiving health care. This saves lives and helps people who face barriers to survive and thrive. This includes access to gender-affirming care, including transition support, for people who identify as transgender. Canada has high rates of bullying (77%) among sexually and gender diverse youth, and gender affirming care is essential to address the existing poorer mental health among this population. High rates of bullying and poorer mental health also contribute to a rate of suicidal ideation in transgender youth that is five times higher than cisgender peers; their rate of suicide attempts are 7.6 times greater (Suicidality among sexual minority and transgender adolescents: a nationally representative population-based study of youth in Canada | CMAJ

In light of this, it is dispiriting to see two Canadian provinces – Alberta and British Columbia – moving to restrict gender affirming care for their youth. The policy changes of these two governments include denying people access to puberty blockers. These essential medicines delay the onset of hormonal changes and give trans and gender-questioning young people more time to consider and explore their options before they make permanent decisions about their bodies. It must be up to a physician or nurse practitioner and their patient to determine the appropriate course of treatment. Other forms of transition support under threat include the right of a young person to change their name or pronouns at school. Denying access to any of these forms of care furthers the risks faced by young people who are often already vulnerable.

The missing piece of so much of the current debate is that transition support is one part of the spectrum of broader, gender-affirming, person-centred care. There are other kinds of gender-affirming care, for other populations, that are commonplace and accepted without debate. These include breast augmentation or reductions, hormone replacement therapy during perimenopause and menopause, or interventions for people experiencing hair loss, low libido, or sexual dysfunction. These interventions are not subject to the same public debate because, unlike trans care, they are not tied to stigma, misinformation, or fear and hatred.

We commend Canada’s doctors and health system leaders who have raised the alarm about policies that restrict access to health care decisions that are between a primary care physician or nurse practitioner and their patient/client, and who have taken a strong stand in support of ensuring that gender-affirming care is accessible, safe and timely, particularly for youth and 2SLGBTQ+ people. These trained health professionals take very seriously their duty to care for Canada’s children and youth, and they are standing together in forceful opposition to attacks on gender-affirming care for transgender youth. In 2024, the Canadian Medical Association declared their opposition to policies that would restrict access to gender-affirming care; the Ontario Medical Association called for gender-affirming care to be prioritized, calling it “lifesaving;” and Ontario Health released quality standards specifically for Gender-Affirming Care for Gender-Diverse People

Across Ontario, local initiatives are putting these bold statements into action. Here are just four examples: 

 

Despite these excellent examples, it is not enough. In Ontario there continues to be long wait times for gender affirming care and the opposition to this care is prolific. We cannot allow misinformation, fear and stigma to drive the debate around evidence-based primary care for youth and 2SLGBTQ+ people, especially transgender people. Those who claim to rally “for kids” are in fact advocating for policy changes that we know – and evidence shows – will harm children and youth. Every person’s health care needs are best decided between them and their physician or nurse practitioner. 

As we move towards another Transgender Day of Remembrance on November 20, and followed by the 16 Days of Action Against Gender-based Violence, let’s remember, and remind people and policymakers alike: 

Trans care is gender-affirming care. And gender-affirming care is primary care. Everyone has the right to this care, and blocking access to it puts lives, including the lives of children, at risk.

 

Ontario Health Menopause Quality Standard Community of Practice Launch: Join the first learning session on November 18

This community of practice and launch webinar are hosted by Ontario Health. 

Ontario Health recently released the new Menopause: Care for Women and Gender-Diverse Peoplequality standard and is launching the Menopause Quality Standard Community of Practice (CoP) on November 18. Clinicians and health care teams are invited to register for the CoP’s first learning session, featuring Dr. Ardelle Piper, on Tuesday, November 18, from 12 p.m. to 1p.m. ET.  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. 

At this accredited learning session, attendees will:  

  • Gain a clear understanding of the new Menopause quality standard, its quality statements and accompanying resources, including the Menopause Implementation Toolkit, which will be debuted during the meeting
  • Learn how to use the quality standard to improve care for women and gender-diverse people experiencing perimenopause or menopause, particularly in primary care settings
  • Explore the historical context that has influenced menopause care and how clinicians can support a shift toward evidence-based care.  

 By registering through the link provided above, you will be enrolled in the complete learning series and receive timely notifications regarding future sessions.

Détails
le Mardi 18 Novembre 2025 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Coût : 
Free
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement
Online event

Hot Topic Webinar: ‘Peering into the System’ with Julia Reid

This webinar is presented by the Substance Use Health Network and the Reclaim Collective

Join us for a powerful conversation with  Julia Reid, a PhD candidate at the Lyle S. Hallman School of Social Work, Wilfrid Laurier University, whose research and clinical practice are transforming how peer work is understood, substance use, and mental health.

Julia brings together lived/living experience, clinical insight, and academic rigour to challenge biomedical dominance and highlight the invaluable expertise of people who’ve been psychiatrized, diagnosed, or criminalized as “addicts.”

Her upcoming talk will explore how Peer Specialists working in substance use health systems navigate exploitation, isolation, and co-optation within both abstinence-based and harm reduction environments — and what transformative, justice-oriented peer work can look like instead.

Julia’s approach, grounded in relational accountability, reciprocity, and community-based methodologies, reimagines how we build knowledge and support healing within substance use health and mental health care.

 

Détails
le Jeudi 13 Novembre 2025 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Coût : 
Free
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement
Online event

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

Join us for a conversation on how people with lived experience are leading transformative change in healthcare and integrated care across Canada. This session will explore authentic partnership, shared power, and what it means to move from consultation to genuine co-leadership in system transformation.

This session is being co-designed with our panelists. A detailed description, discussion topics, and panelist bios will be available soon.

# Faciltators

Jodeme Goldhar | Co-Director, IFIC Canada

Prof. Walter Wodchis | Co-Director, IFIC Canada

Détails
le Mercredi 12 Novembre 2025 - 12:00
12:00-1:30pm
Coût : 
Free
Emplacement
Online via Zoom

AI-Driven Misinformation Across Sectors: Addressing a Cross-Societal Challenge

This panel discussion is presented by the Canadian Science Policy Institute

Artificial Intelligence is reshaping how information is created, consumed, and trusted. While offering transformative potential in sectors like healthcare, education, finance, and public discourse, AI systems also introduce new vulnerabilities—particularly in the spread of misinformation and disinformation. From fabricated medical advice and AI-generated “deepfake” political content to financial scams and distorted educational tools, AI misinformation poses a growing threat to public trust and safety.

This panel brings together cross-sectoral experts to examine how AI-driven misinformation manifests in their respective domains, its consequences, and how policy, regulation, and technical interventions can help mitigate harm. The discussion will explore practical pathways for action, such as digital literacy, risk audits, content verification technologies, platform responsibility, and regulatory frameworks. Attendees will leave with a nuanced understanding of both the risks and the resilience strategies being explored in Canada and globally.

# Panelists

Dr. Plinio Morita | Associate Professor / Director, Ubiquitous Health Technology Lab, University of Waterloo

Dr. Nadia Naffi | Université Laval — Associate Professor of Educational Technology and expert on building human agency against AI-augmented disinformation and deepfakes

Dr. Jutta Treviranus | Director, Inclusive Design Research Centre, OCAD U, Expert on AI misinformation in the Education sector and schools

Michael Geist (Moderator) | Canada Research Chair in Internet & E-commerce Law, University of Ottawa

Dr. Fenwick McKelvey | Concordia University — Expert in political bots, information flows, and Canadian tech governance

#  
Détails
le Mardi 11 Novembre 2025 - 12:00
12:00-1:30pm
Coût : 
Free
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement
Online via Zoom

Better Care Starts Here: How to Embed Caregivers as Partners in Care

This webinar is presented by the Ontario Caregiver Organization

When care providers include caregivers as partners in care, communication improves, staff experience less stress, and care is enhanced. It's a win for everyone, but the process can feel overwhelming. 

How do you train caregivers or already-overwhelmed staff? What about getting buy-in from leadership or care recipient confidentiality? And how can you know something will actually work in your setting? 

That's where the Ontario Caregiver Organization's Essential Care Partner Support Hub comes in. 

# Webinar Overview

In this 30-minute info session with the Support Hub, you’ll hear stories from caregivers and frontline teams as well as the latest Ontario data to understand why caregiver inclusion matters. Plus, you’ll get simple, proven steps used by organizations to better engage, support, and collaborate with caregivers as part of the care team. You’ll walk away with:

✅ A clear understanding of caregivers and their impact on care delivery

✅ Practical ways to identify caregivers early and consistently across care settings 

✅ Tools to support better communication, reducing stress and confusion while supporting smoother transitions 

✅ Access to ready-to-use training templates for caregivers and staff 

✅ Real stories from caregivers and organizations already doing the work 

Join to find out why more than 300+ care teams across hospitals, long-term care, primary care, and home & community care have trusted us to help them better engage, support, and collaborate with care partners—and how we can help you achieve your goals, too.

This session is designed for: Clinicians, care navigators, leaders, managers, and teams advancing patient- and family-centred care. Free to attend. No prep required. 

NOTE:  This session won’t be recorded.

# About the Support Hub

Trusted by Ontario’s hospital, long-term care, primary care, and home and community care teams, The Support Hub provides: 

 Tools and templates that make care partner inclusion easier, whatever your setting

  • Real examples from organizations already leading the way
  • Simple, practical steps your team can take right now to improve transitions, reduce stress, and enhance care
  • Training resources for caregivers and staff
  • 1:1 support to embed person- and family-centered care across your organization 

 Join their info session on Nov 12 at 12 PM to learn more and connect with their team.

Détails
le Mercredi 12 Novembre 2025 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Coût : 
Free
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement
Online event

Better Breathing Week 2026

This event is presented by the Lung Health Foundation.

Better Breathing Week 2026 marks the 43rd annual gathering of healthcare professionals, researchers, policymakers, and patient advocates dedicated to advancing lung health across Canada.  

This year’s program focuses on breaking down silos and uniting disciplines. Highlights include a dedicated series for primary care providers addressing limited access to spirometry, vaccine uptake, and severe asthma identification. 

Register to secure your spot for an incredible conference: Better Breathing Week Registration - Better Breathing Week 2026

See full list of individual prices here. Reach out to lraggente@lunghealth.ca for information about group discounts.

# Conference Dates

  • January 20–21, 2026 — Virtual
  • January 23–24, 2026 — In-person at the Hyatt Regency Toronto 

Join us virtually or in-person to be part of the conversation shaping the future of lung health in Canada. Some sessions are listed below; you can explore the full program here: Preliminary Program - Better Breathing Week 2026

# Curated Virtual Sessions

  • Motivating Change: A Primary Care Lens on Breathing, Behavior, and Better Health (with Peter Selby, MBBS, CCFP(AM), FCFP, MHSc, DFSAM on Jan. 20 at 9:00am EST, virtual)
  • Contemporary Approaches to Smoking and Vaping Cessation (with Hassan Mir, MD, FRCPC on Jan. 20 at 10:00am EST, virtual)
  • Advancing Respiratory Care in Rural and Remote Communities (with Birubi Biman, MD, FRCPC, Tracey Carr, BA, MSc, PhD, MA, and Andre Letendre on Jan. 20 at 11:00am, virtual)
  • Improving Outcomes Through Trauma-Informed Lung Cancer Care (with Tara Lohmann, MD, FRCPC, and Christine Fader, DSW, on Jan. 20 at 2:00pm, virtual)
  • Breaking Barriers: Tackling Lung Health Stigma in Practice (with Ambreen Sayani, MD, MS, PhD, Gary Bloch, MD, CCFP, FCFP, Vanessa Wright, DNP and Howard Freedman on Jan. 20 at 3:00pm EST, virtual)
  • Inhaler Technique 101: Practical Guidance for Healthcare Providers (with Alia Maratova, RRT, CRE, on Jan. 20 at 3:00pm EST, virtual)

# Curated In-Person Sessions

  • How to Start Patients on Airway Clearance Therapy? A Physiotherapist-Led Overview (with Kenneth Wu, PT, MBA, PhD, Prashna Singh, PT, CRE, and Diana Hatzoglou, PT, CRE on Jan. 23 at 1:15pm EST, in-person)
  • Collaborating for the Future: Innovation in Respiratory Care (with Shirley Quach, RRT, MHSc, PhD, Melis Erkan, and Sidra Anjum on Jan. 23 at 5:00pm EST, in-person)
  • From Oscillometry to Spirometry: Practical Insights in Pulmonary Function Testing (with Chung-Wai Show, PhD, MD, FRCPC, Donald Cockcroft, MD, FRCPC, and Sanja Stanojevic, PhD, on Jan. 24 at 1:15pm EST, in-person)

# Primary Care Series

We are also excited to welcome back our Primary Care Series on Wednesday January 21, from 1:00pm EST to 4:00pm EST:

  1. The Realities of Spirometry Testing in Primary Care: Addressing the Barriers (with Anthony D’Urzo, MD, MSc, BPHE, CCFP, FCFP)
  2. Identifying Suspected Severe Asthma and Prompt Referral in Primary Care (with Jason K. Lee, MD, FCPC, FAAAI)
  3. Strengthening Defenses: Advancing Immunization and Vaccine Uptake in Respiratory Disease (Christine Palmay, MD, CCFP, FCFP)

# CME Accreditation

Better Breathing 2026 has been officially certified and accredited for continuing education credits:

Credits for Family Medicine Specialists: This Certified Activity meets the certification criteria of the College of Family Physicians of Canada and has been certified by the Queen's University CPD Team for up to 27.5 Mainpro+ credits.

Credits for Royal College Specialists: This co-developed activity is an Accredited Group Learning Activity (Section 1) as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Program of The Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, and approved and co-developed by the Queen's University CPD Team. You may claim a maximum of 27.5 hours (credits are automatically calculated).

Hours for All Health Professionals: This is a professional learning activity which provided up to 27.5 hours of Continuing Education

 

Détails
le Mardi 20 Janvier 2026 - 09:00
le Mercredi 21 Janvier 2026 - 09:00
le Vendredi 23 Janvier 2026 - 09:00
le Vendredi 24 Janvier 2025 - 00:00
January 20-21 (Virtual) and 23-24 (In Person)
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement
Hybrid (Virtual and In-Person)
Hyatt Regency Toronto - 370 King St W
Toronto, ON M5V 1J9

Midwifery Connecting Primary Care and Hospital

This webinar is presented by the Alliance for Healthier Communities

The Midwifery and Toronto Community Health (MATCH) Program based at South Riverdale CHC has partnered with the Michael Garron Hospital’s Early Pregnancy Clinic (EPC) to improve the quality, safety, and accessibility of care for Early Pregnancy Loss. In less than two years, they have worked with obstetric colleagues to develop evidence-based protocols, have strengthened relationships between Midwifery and Obstetrics departments, provided education for primary care providers and community midwives, and developed patient handouts tailored to the community. They've also expanded clinic hours, established a hotline, created a pathway for uninsured patients to receive care from the hospital, and improved referral pathways between the community and the hospital. 

In this webinar, MATCH co-leads Shezeen Suleman and Jenna Bly, both Registered Midwives, will describe how this unique partnership came about and provide an overview of their innovative approach and the impact it's already had. Attendees will come away with a deepened appreciation for the potential of hospital-community collaboration, the importance of integrated midwifery care, and how these things can help reduce the need for people with early pregnancy loss seek care from emergency departments.

MATCH program logo
Détails
le Mercredi 11 Février 2026 - 12:00
12:00-1:00 pm
Coût : 
Free
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement