Lunch 'n' Learn Webinar: Strategies and Tools to Support Equity, Safety, and Quality in Virtual Care Delivery

Join us on Thursday, June 22, to learn about resources and strategies that can support informed decisions about virtual care.

In March 2020, primary health care organizations needed to reduce or suspend in-person programs and services in order to help keep their clients, staff, and communities safe. To ensure continuity of care, many - including nearly all Alliance members - rapidly adopted tools and processes to deliver their programs and services remotely. Although most facilities have now reopened, many primary health care organizations continue to offer some programs and services virtually. Numerous organizations have developed tools and guidance to help providers and clients make informed decisions about when and how to use virtual care modalities in ways that are safe, equitable, and effective.

For this lunch 'n' learn webinar, we've convened a a panel of experts in primary health care quality and virtual care delivery from the Alliance for Healthier Communities, Healthcare Excellence Canada, Canada Health Infoway, and Ontario Health. They'll present an overview of their organizations' virtual care resources and help us understand how these resources complement one another and can be used together when planning and delivering care.

#Panelists

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Morenike Akinyemi, Senior Manager, Change Management and Engagement at Canada Health Infoway

Morenike is a digital health enthusiast who started off her career as a pharmacist and has progressively transitioned into roles where she is facilitating the use of technology to address clinical priorities. She has hands on experience working with clinicians, patients, leadership and other relevant stakeholders to lead the implementation of various technology solutions to support virtual visits, remote patient monitoring, online cognitive behavioural therapy, etc.

In her current role at Infoway, she supports continuous consultation and engagement with key stakeholders, government and strategic partners to foster collaboration and partnerships with stakeholders as well as to regularly share goals and objectives of the Infoway’s strategic priorities, gather input and feedback and proactively raise awareness of the impact, successes and results of the Infoway’s initiatives.

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Jessie Checkley, Senior Program Lead at Healthcare Excellence Canada

Jessie Checkley is a Senior Program Lead on the Health Innovations Programs team at Healthcare Excellence Canada. She brings over 15 years of experience in leading the design, delivery and evaluation of pan-Canadian quality improvement initiatives including Partnering on Appropriate Virtual Care, Bridge-to-Home, Essential Together (Better Together), Call for Innovations in Palliative Care and the EXTRA: Executive Training Program. Jessie's background is in Project Management, Business Administration and Accounting. She comes to this work as the caregiver for her aging parents and her partner.

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David Kaplan, Vice President, Quality at Ontario Health

David M. Kaplan MD, MSc, CCFP, FCFP is the Vice President, Quality at Ontario Health (Clinical Institutes and Quality Programs). Previously, he was the Chief, Clinical Quality and Primary Care Quality Lead at Health Quality Ontario. Dr. Kaplan is an academic family physician at North York General Hospital, where he serves as the Deputy Chair of the Medical Advisory Committee. He is an associate professor in the Department of Family & Community Medicine and Joint Centre for Bioethics at the University of Toronto. He completed his graduate training in Health Policy and Bioethics in the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation at the University of Toronto. He is a fellow of the College of Family Physicians of Canada.

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Jennifer Rayner, Director, Research and Policy at Alliance for Healthier Communities

Dr. Rayner is an applied health services researcher with interests in primary health care, interprofessional teams and health equity. She is the Director of Research and Evaluation at the Alliance for Healthier Communities, an Adjunct Research Professor at Western University within the Centre for Studies in Family Medicine, and an Associate Professor at University of Toronto in the Department of Community and Family Medicine and the Institute of Health Policy Management and Evaluation. Dr. Rayner has been a principle or co-investigator for numerous studies about virtual delivery of primary health care.

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Kevin Samson, Family Physician at East Wellington Family Health Team

Dr. Samson has been practicing family medicine for over 35 years. He is also a software design engineer and has had extensive experience in the design, development and application of digital health solutions throughout his career. Dr. Samson was a member of the Virtual Care Together Design Collaborative Team that developed the Healthcare Excellence Canada (HEC) and Canada Health Infoway (CHI) Clinician Change Virtual Care Toolkit, which included the Virtual Care Evaluation Guide. He is continuing to work with HEC on their Partnering on Appropriate Virtual Care Collaborative to improve access to appropriate, culturally safe and equitable care in northern, rural and remote communities across the country.

 

Détails
le Jeudi 22 Juin 2023 - 12:00
12:00-1:00 pm
Coût : 
Free
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement

Stimulus 2023

Stimulus 2023 is a two-and-a-half day event scheduled October 5-7, 2023 in beautiful Ottawa, Ontario. We expect to welcome 1,500 people whose expertise includes substance use experts, nurses, social workers, physicians, corrections staff, frontline workers, people involved in sex work, researchers, and other key stakeholders from across Canada.

The event will be the largest national harm reduction and drug policy gathering in Canada and is being held at the Shaw Conference Centre in downtown Ottawa.

In addition to the conference we expect over 25 satellite events. Satellite events are held by other organizations or collaborations and are scheduled in conjunction to the Stimulus 2023 conference. These satellites can be workshops, art installations, advocacy actions, meetings, tours, or any activities that want to take advantage of many of us in the same space. If you are interested in hosting a satellite please email the Stimulus staff.

Stimulus acknowledges that there are two public health crisis in Canada. People continue to die at alarming rates from accidental poisoning from a toxic illegal drug market and the work to protect the health and safety of those who use drugs must continue. We watched a range of Canadian governments respond to COVID19 and wish a similar level of response was taking place to save the lives of people at risk of drug policy deaths in Canada.

Stimulus is not considered a regular conference. People with current or recent experience of using criminalized drugs are experts. Harm reductionists and people who use drugs hold a range of leadership roles in planning, implementing and evaluating this event. We strive to have the most accessible, interactive and safe event possible. There will be a call for scholarship applications and for interest in volunteering, presenting and facilitating. We look forward to seeing you next October!

Détails
le Mardi 9 Mai 2023 - 11:45
Emplacement
Shaw Conference Centre
Ottawa, ON

Ontario Health’s Eating Disorders Webinar

Register to attend Ontario Health’s Mental Health and Addictions Centre of Excellence’s first webinar on the development of the Eating Disorders Provincial Program. Ontario Health is working with people with lived experience, service providers, and administrators to develop an accessible, standardized, evidence-based, and high-quality eating disorders system in Ontario.

The objectives of this webinar are to:

  • Provide an overview of Ontario Health’s and the Mental Health and Addictions Centre of Excellence
  • Discuss the vision for the Eating Disorders Provincial Program, and provide an overview of work planned over the coming months.

The recording and presentation slides will be available after the end of the presentation. If you have any questions, please reach out to us at: MHACoE@OntarioHealth.ca

Détails
le Mardi 30 Mai 2023 - 10:00
10-11 am
Coût : 
FREE
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement

Are we giving falls the respect they deserve? Role of the nervous system and the Care Pathway

 

June is brain injury awareness month. Join Judy Gargaro, Matheus Wiest and Janelle Unger to discuss the intersectionality between falls and neurotrauma, evidence-based care pathways and targeted treatment approaches to prevent falls.

In the first part of this webinar, the presenters will discuss the Neurotrauma Care Pathways project based in Ontario. Ontario, like other jurisdictions in Canada and internationally, lacks an equitable system of care for traumatic brain injury (TBI) and traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI), where quality of care and health outcomes depend on where you live, available funding and severity/type of injury. Evidence-based standardized neurotrauma care pathways for all persons living with TBI or tSCI of any severity were developed by engaging 170 key partners from across the Ontario representing different care and funding sectors common to all jurisdictions. Partners include people with lived experience, clinicians, researchers, funders, and community providers from different sectors. In addition, a companion set of quality indicators has been developed that map onto the Pathways and preliminary data has been collected. While these pathways and quality indicators have been developed in Ontario, they are applicable and relevant to any province or territory. Falls represent a significant cause of TBI and tSCI and data will be presented on the cohort of persons with TBI or tSCI who have sustained a fall.

To understand why falls happen, we need to understand how the nervous system reacts after balance is lost, and how the ability to recover can be impacted by neurological impairments or aging. By understanding the neural mechanisms of falls, we can better create rehabilitation programs to prevent them. At the newly established Gray Centre for Mobility and Activity at Parkwood Institute in London, Ontario we are creating several new initiatives to promote lifelong mobility for populations that are impacted by falls. These programs are designed to prevent falls and their secondary complications, and to facilitate safe participation in activities of daily living and physical activity.

Détails
le Mercredi 21 Juin 2023 - 12:00
12-1 pm
Coût : 
FREE
Internal/External: 
Type d’événement : 
Emplacement

Childhood Disability (Without) Poverty: A National Discussion

This family-led event will explore the intersection of familial poverty, childhood disability, and health outcomes. It will create an opportunity for families, health care professionals, and policy researchers to come together and share both their knowledge and lived experiences on equal footing to identify where we can partner to effect systemic change. Childhood disability is known to have a huge financial impact on families and children.

There is simply not enough data or awareness about the intersection of childhood disability with familial and personal lifelong financial challenges.

We want to change that.

Disability Without Poverty is a movement, led by people with disabilities supported by our families, friends, service providers, allies and organizations. Right now, our priority is to build consensus toward a federal Canada Disability Benefit that would ensure income support above the poverty line for people who live with disabilities.

Détails
le Vendredi 12 Mai 2023 - 00:00
May 12-13, 12-4 pm EDT
Coût : 
Free
Internal/External: 
Emplacement