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2018 Research Division Annual Report
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Research Division - McGill University

Apr 11, 2023

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Page 1: Research Division - McGill University

2018 Research Division

Annual Report

Page 2: Research Division - McGill University
Page 3: Research Division - McGill University

Contents MENU Our Mandate ................................................................................................................................ 1

Message from the Director ......................................................................................................... 2

Researchers Profiles ...................................................................................................................... 3

Research Division Activities ....................................................................................................... 13

Research Seminars .................................................................................................................. 14

Dr. Hirsh Rosenfeld Annual Public Distinguished Lecture ................................................... 15

4th Annual McGill Family Medicine Research Symposium ............................................... 17

Isaac Tannenbaum Family Medicine Resident Research Day 2018 ............................... 20

Family Medicine Graduate Students’ Society .................................................................... 21

Pizza & Politics .......................................................................................................................... 22

Family Medicine & McGill Observatory Seminar Series ..................................................... 23

Research Groups ........................................................................................................................ 24

McGill Primary Health Care Research Network (PBRN) ..................................................... 25

Quebec SPOR SUPPORT Unit – Method Development component ............................... 26

Participatory Research At McGill (PRAM) ........................................................................... 28

The Global Health Program ................................................................................................... 29

Researchers Teams ..................................................................................................................... 30

Community Information and Epidemiological Technologies (CIET) ................................ 31

The Information Technology Primary Care Research Group (ITPCRG) ........................... 32

The Information Technology Primary Care Research Group (ITPCRG) ........................... 32

The Artificial Intelligence in Family Medicine at McGill (AIFM) ......................................... 32

Research on Organization of healthcare Services for Alzheimers (ROSA) ..................... 33

The Family Medicine Educational Research Group (FMER) ............................................. 34

Research Outcomes & Administration .................................................................................... 35

Honours, Awards and Prizes ................................................................................................... 36

Overview of Research Productivity ...................................................................................... 37

Publication list .......................................................................................................................... 38

Journal Articles ........................................................................................................................ 38

Books & Book Chapters .......................................................................................................... 47

Reports...................................................................................................................................... 49

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The Family Medicine Research Division

Our Mandate

Our Division is committed to enhancing the discipline of family medicine and primary care through rigorous and relevant creation of original evidence to address important knowledge gaps. Our internationally recognized scientists address topics pertaining to multi-morbidity, undifferentiated presentations, and organization of care as well as research on the diagnosis, treatment and management of health problems; prevention and health promotion; family and community interventions; governance; economics; workforce development; access to services; and the three “C’s” of high quality primary care: continuity, coordination and comprehensiveness. This is done through the development and use of different research methodologies that equally value qualitative and quantitative evidence generated by researchers framed in multiple research paradigms. The richness of expertise, experience and interdisciplinarity ensures that our division is actively contributing to our discipline and the health of local communities, across Canada and globally.

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Dr. Gillian Bartlett is a tenured Professor as well as the Research Director and the Associate Chair in the Department of Family Medicine at McGill University. She received her PhD in epidemiology from McGill in 2001 and her MSc in 1996. In 2014, she was awarded the Carrie M. Derick Award for Excellence in Graduate Teaching and Supervision for McGill University and the Faculty of Medicine Honour List for Educational Excellence. Dr. Bartlett specializes in primary care research and knowledge translation. Her current concentration is on knowledge translation and stakeholder engagement around health care utilization and outcomes for vulnerable populations, implementation of precision medicine using patient-oriented strategies; and the use of education innovations to advance the discipline of family medicine and primary care. She is currently the Executive Director for the Network Coordinating Office of the Primary and Integrated Health Care Innovations (PIHCI) Network.

Message from the Director It is with great pride that I formally present this annual report, as Research Director, to highlight so many of the impressive contributions from our Research Division in the Department of Family Medicine. This is an excellent opportunity to celebrate our accomplishments, reflect on lessons learned and plan for the future. I strongly believe that our scientists, their trainees, their teams and their collaborators and partners reflect the richness and diversity that exemplifies the reality of family medicine and primary care. The topics we have chosen to focus on cover the life cycle of people, geographic locations across the world and the organization of services that make up our health care system locally and globally.

I also feel that this report gives a sense of the collaborative nature of our work and of the leadership and integration of our scientists in many of the important research structures across Canada and internationally. We have an extremely well developed toolkit of research methodologies thereby avoiding the mental trap that Maslow (1966) refers to when he stated that, “I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail.” Our family medicine and primary care context is complex and by using multiple approaches, we are increasing our impact and successes in improving the health for all. I look forward to the innovative approaches that our Division will develop based on the successes summarized in this report. I would like to thank Ms. Annick Beaudry for her tireless work in supporting our Division and helping to make this report a reality.

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Researchers Profiles

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The Research Community Within the Department of Family Medicine

Dr. Anne Andermann is the founding director of the CLEAR Collaboration that aims to help frontline health workers address the underlying social causes of poor health through a combination of direct patient care, referral and advocacy for larger social change. Dr. Andermann has previously worked on research capacity strengthening for low- and middle-income countries at the World Health Organization in Geneva

where she was also a member of the WHO Research Ethics Review Committee and a main contributing author of the World Health Report 2008 on increasing universal access to primary health care. Dr. Andermann is currently the Medical Specialist in Public Health and Preventive Medicine at Health Canada’s Quebec Regional Office, a Public Health Physician at the Cree Board of Health and Social Services of James Bay Northern Quebec, Chair of the Community Oriented Primary Care Committee (COPC) at St Mary’s Hospital, and the focal point at the McGill Faculty of Medicine responsible for incorporating a greater emphasis on the social determinants of health and a population health approach into the new medical school curriculum.

Dr Neil Andersson is Professor of Family Medicine, director of the amalgamates CIET and Participatory Research at McGill (PRAM) and co-director of the McGill Institute of Human Development and Well-being. He has a special interest in large scale pragmatic trials that incorporate community views and resources in primary prevention. Current research focuses on safe birth in cultural safety (Mexico, Colombia, Nigeria) and structural interventions to reduce HIV risk among young women (Botswana), and gamification of learning about community-based vector control.

Dr. Roksana Behruzi is a clinician researcher with more than 20 years of experience in both teaching and clinical research. She completed a PhD in Public Health (health care organization) at the University of Montreal, in 2011, during which she obtained many awards and bursaries such as: CIHR, STIRRHS, Sainte-Justine Hospital Foundation For love of Children (FHSJ/FRMI) and Bourse d'Études Supérieures en Santé Publique de Université de Montréal. In 2008, she awarded by JSPS-CIHR to accomplish a fellowship in Japan on maternity care services. She also accomplished three years postdoctoral fellowship in Health Services and Health Policy at the department of Family Medicine at McGill University, for which, she was awarded twice the Fond de Recherche en Santé du Québec (FRSQ) Postdoctoral Bursary. Her excellent experience

and skills in monitoring adherence of projects to GCPs and Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) led to collaborate with GCP Trials center in Montreal where she gives workshops addressed to clinical research staff. Her ultimate goal has always been to improve the overall health of women and families. She was appointed at the department since 2016, with an affiliation to the Research Center at CISSS in Outaouais. She has been the principal investigator of many clinical trials, Randomized Controlled trials in the field of obstetrics and gynecology, as well as qualitative and case studies in health care services and health policy. Her current research interest is in area of Probiotics Effect on Group B Streptococcus (GBS) recto-vaginal colonization in pregnant women.

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Dr. Eugene Bereza is a family physician with a background in literature, music therapy, palliative care and bioethics. He studied medicine and completed his residency at McGill University before pursuing a post-doctoral fellowship at the MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics at the University of Chicago. He is actively engaged in academic medical ethics, clinical ethics, research ethics and health policy development across the spectrum of care in Quebec through his work at the CIUSSS du Centre-Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal, the McGill University Health Centre, the Montreal Neurological Institute, as well as many provincial and national, professional organizations. As Associate Professor of Bioethics and former Director of the Biomedical Ethics Unit at McGill’s Faculty of Medicine, he teaches graduate seminars in bioethics to students in medicine, law, philosophy, and religious studies and supervises their research. He also teaches ethics to medical students, medical residents, medical faculty, as well as allied health professionals (nursing, social work, pastoral care, etc.) in an inter-disciplinary context. His main area of interest has always been end-of-life care, with a special emphasis on palliative care and euthanasia, especially in Quebec’s multicultural context. Dr. Bereza is currently Director of the newly created MUHC Centre for Applied Ethics, where he has instituted an innovative program for an integrated, multi-disciplinary, professional approach to applied ethics.

Dr. Yves Bergevin completed twelve years of service at the United Nations in 2013, where he was Coordinator of the Maternal Health Thematic Fund (MHTF) and Senior Maternal Health Advisor, providing

overall leadership in maternal health for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). Yves Bergevin has held several senior level positions in global health, including Chief Health at UNICEF, where he fostered a renewed focus on child survival and a major increase in funding for health. Prior to this, he was Principal Advisor, Health, Population and Nutrition for the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), wrote CIDA’s first ever Strategy for Health and contributed to making health a development priority for Canada. He advocated successfully for a renewed focus on immunization and was, together with his Minister, one of the founding Board Members of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI), convinced of the benefits of performance-based funding towards sustained impact.

Dr. Howard Bergman, Professor of Family Medicine, Medicine (Geriatrics) and Oncology, is Assistant Dean for International Affairs in the Faculty of Medicine and former Chair of the Department of Family Medicine. Dr. Bergman is a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. He is internationally recognized for research which has influenced policy change in primary and integrated care, aging, chronic disease and frailty, with more than 180 peer-reviewed publications as well as 60 reports and book chapters. In 2015, he received the College of Family Physicians of Canada Award for Lifetime Achievement in Family Medicine Research. In 2000, as a member of a Quebec Government independent Commission on health care reform, he authored the recommendation creating the Family Medicine Groups (GMF). In 2009, at the request of the Quebec Minister of Health, he authored the Quebec Alzheimer Plan. Dr Bergman chaired the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences Panel assembled at the request of Public Health Agency of Canada. (Improving the quality of life and care of persons living with dementia, https://www.cahs-acss.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Report.pdf). With Dr. Isabelle Vedel, he created the Canadian Team for healthcare services/system improvement in dementia care dedicated to the evaluation and implementation of initiatives to improve the capacity of primary care to diagnose and treat persons living with dementia. Dr. Bergman leads the McGill Family Medicine Innovation in Learning Initiative as well as the Distance-Blended International Education Program for Family Medicine Teachers and Teacher-Leaders.

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Dr. Anne Cockcroft is a clinician and implementation research specialist with a background in respiratory and occupational medicine in the UK. Working with a research and training NGO (CIET) since 1994, she has led large scale community-based implementation research projects in some 20 countries, especially in South Asia and Southern Africa, and in Canada. A strong focus has been access to and experience of health services by the most vulnerable, working with health providers and policy makers to use evidence to develop equitable and effective services. Most of her research has been in resource-poor settings: First Nations in Canada, and the poorest populations of South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. In the last decade, her work has focussed increasingly on structural interventions. She leads a national stepped-wedge trial of structural interventions for HIV prevention in Botswana (INSTRUCT), and a randomised controlled trial of universal home visits to reduce maternal morbidity in Bauchi State, Nigeria. Dr Cockcroft trains health planners and researchers in Southern Africa in evidence-based planning. She leads a project funded by the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC) to train HIV researchers and health planners, in English, French and Portuguese, leading to a Certificate from McGill Family Medicine. The training in evidence-based policy she supported for parliamentarians in Botswana was recently featured in Science.

Dr. Alexandra de Pokomandy (MDCM MSc), is an assistant professor at the McGill University Health Center and a family physician specialized in HIV patient care since 2003, currently practicing at the

Immunodeficiency Service of the Montreal Chest Institute. She completed a Post-Doctoral fellowship in HIV research with the CIHR Canadian HIV Trials Network in 2007 and a Master of Science degree in Epidemiology at McGill University in 2009. She is the recipient of a FRSQ Clinical Research Scholarship Junior 1 (Chercheur Boursier Clinicien Junior 1), for 2011–2015 and is a member of the scientific committee of the FRSQ network “AIDS and Infectious Disease” (Sida-Maladies Infectieuses). Her main interests of research are in cancer related to human papillomavirus (HPV) affecting people living with HIV (particularly regarding the potential prevention of anal cancer), HIV-positive women’s health, and HIV integrated health care. Her work as a physician and researcher aims to recognize patient health concerns and make improvements to clinical practices that will benefit HIV-positive individuals.

Dr. Tamara Carver is an Assistant Professor at McGill University in the Faculty of Medicine, Department of Family Medicine. She is also the Education Lead of Family Medicine Innovations in Learning (FMIL), which supports leading-edge education innovation within the Department of Family Medicine for Faculty Development as well as the Undergraduate, Graduate, Postgraduate, and International Education programs. She is a certified instructional designer and her research focusses on the evaluation of blended education programs and developing communities of practice through innovation in education.

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Dr. Alison Doucet is assistant Professor in the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University, and a family physician at the Queen Elizabeth Primary Care (GMF-UMF) clinic, she also works as a hospitalist at the McGill University Health Center on the acute respiratory service. Earlier in her career, she provided primary care to Cree and Inuit communities of Northern Quebec. From 2006 to 2014, she was the Director of the Global Health Division at the Department of Family Medicine. She is currently the principal Investigator and a preceptor for TEACH, Training and Education for Andean Community Health, a training program for indigenous community health workers in Ecuador. This project is a participatory action research project initiated in 2011. In this context, she has co-supervised numerous students for their summer research projects. Her particular area of interest is empowerment of patients and primary health care workers through education and capacity-building.

Holder of the first McGill Chair in Family and Community Medicine Research, based

at St. Mary’s Hospital Centre and McGill University, Dr. Jeannie Haggerty’s domain of research is the factors related to accessibility and quality of primary care, particularly the impact of health system policies and reforms. Her current research program focuses on the measure of patient experience with patient-centered and effective primary health care and how these measures relate to changes in organizational and professional practices. She is nominated principal investigator of a Canada-Australia research program that aims to improve access to primary health care for socially vulnerable health care. She was also founding scientific director of the Québec Primary Health Care Knowledge Network, Réseau-1 Québec. Her goal is to present the public voice in a clear way to healthcare decision-makers on issues of equitable access and quality of healthcare.

Dr. Roland Grad studies the use of 'evidence' in everyday clinical practice. Since 2003, his work to develop and validate the Information Assessment Method is funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the Canadian Medical Association and the Canadian Pharmacists Association. The Information Assessment Method is a promising tool for (1) knowledge translation research, focused on practice-based education, and (2) understanding how health professionals use research-based clinical information. In addition to his research, Dr. Grad is a practicing family physician. In publicly funded work, he co-developed and validated the Information Assessment Method (IAM) www.mcgill.ca/iam.

Dr. Vladimir Khanassov graduated from the medical school in Kazakhstan with honour, completed his post-graduate training in family medicine and fellowship in Care of Elderly at McGill University in 2016. Prior to the residency training he completed the Master's program in Family Medicine at McGill University, where he

focused on the key components of dementia management models in primary health care - case management. Dr Khanassov is currently practicing in GMF Herzl, the division of geriatric medicine of the Jewish General hospital and the Institut Universitaire de Geriatrie de Montreal (IUGM). He is also Assistant professor at the department of Family Medicine at McGill University. He was awarded FRQS bursaries (MSc and PhD), nominated McGill Medstar (2015), resident of the year (2015), and also a winner of the first "Patient's Choice Award" at the North American Primary Care Research Group conference. He is a recipient of the FRQS Clinician-Researcher Junior 1 (2018-2022) and FRQS-FMOQ Aspirant -Chercheur bursary (2017-2021). He is currently developing a research program focusing on the needs of patients with dementia and their caregivers in primary care.

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Dr. Ann Macaulay promotes participatory research to engage communities, clinicians, patients and decision makers in equitable research partnerships. The co-decision making incorporates all team member expertise and increases integrated and end-of-grant knowledge translation. My over 30 year experience includes systematic reviews documenting participatory research benefits with communities and health organisations, short and long term projects partnering with patients, clinicians, health organisations, policy makers, Indigenous communities, vulnerable populations (homeless and women prisoners), and both improved care and primary prevention of type 2 diabetes in Indigenous communities, and the ethics of participatory research, which ensure protection of collectivities and individuals. From 1994-2018, I was Scientific Director of the Kahnawake Schools Diabetes Prevention Project, a 25 year old award-winning participatory research project with the Kanien’kehá:ka (Mohawk) community of Kahnawake, Quebec, Canada. In 2006 I inaugurated ‘Participatory Research at McGill’ (PRAM), which under Dr Neil Andersson, has expanded into CIET-PRAM, to further the participatory research academic discipline and train faculty and students through McGill and long distance learning. My awards include the Order of Canada for contributions to Indigenous Health and memberships of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences and US National Academy of Medicine.

Dr. Irina Kudrina (MD-Kazakhstan, MD CM (McGill), CCFP, MSc (c)) is a junior clinician-scientist with clinical and research interests in chronic pain and narcotic analgesics. Dr. Kudrina is a graduate of the Almaty State Medical Institute (1997, general surgery internship), she is also a graduate of McGill Medical School (2012). She did her post-graduate training at McGill: family medicine residency (Herzl), added competency year (2015) Clinician Scholar Program, then continued as a post-doctoral fellow graduating from Alan Edwards Clinical Research in Pain fellowship (2016), and North American Primary Care Research Group fellowship (2019). She is presently finishing her Master’s of Science degree (2021) at McGill. Dr. Kudrina’s research is supported by the LE-250 (MSSS/FMOQ, chercheur-aspirant, 2016-2020). Dr. Kudrina is a full-time Assistant Professor at the McGill Department of Family Medicine (since 2016) and an Associate Member of the McGill Anesthesia Department. Her main work has been focused on chronic pain, access to services and transitions in care for young patients suffering from pain, pathophysiology and clinical chronic toxicity of opioids and cannabinoids. Her special clinical interests are in chronic pain and addiction, she serves as a consulting physician for the CIUSSS Centre Ouest UPI douleur chronique and sits on the College of Family Physicians of Canada chronic pain committee.

Dr. Bertrand Lebouché, MD, PhD is a HIV and HCV Primary care specialist at the Chronic Viral Illness Service of the Glen Hospital, McGill University Health Centre, an Associate Professor of Family Medicine at McGill

University(Montreal, Canada), and a scientist conducting patient-oriented clinical research with people living with HIV and HCV and HIV prevention particularly for men who have sex with men. He is leading a research program with investigators from across Canada and France, to develop, validate and implement a new electronically administered patient-reported outcome measure (PRO) for use in routine HIV care, to detect and help manage barriers to antiretroviral therapy adherence that are relevant to both patients and clinicians. To administer electronically his e-PROM, he is actually adapting for HIV care a patient-conceived smartphone app (Opal) in use at the Cedars Cancer Centre of the McGill University Health Centre. He holds a Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR) Chair in Innovative Clinical Trials in HIV care, awarded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

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Dr. PETER NUGUS (MA Hons, MEd, PhD) is an Associate Professor in the Department of Family Medicine and the Institute of Health Sciences Education at McGill University, Montreal, Canada. Peter is also Acting Director of the McGill University Practice-based Research Network (PBRN) (Réseaux de recherche axée sur les pratiques de première ligne-RRAPPL). Drawing on a background in Political Science, Philosophy, Adult Education and Sociology, Peter’s published ethnographic and participatory research in emergency departments and various hospital and community settings across six countries, and teaching, has focused on

workplace and organizational learning, care coordination, culture and identity in complex organizations, and translation and mobilization of knowledge across knowledge producers and users. Peter held a Fulbright post-doctoral scholarship at the University of California Los Angeles and an Australian government Endeavour post-doctoral scholarship at Columbia University, and was a postdoc at the Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research (NIVEL). Peter has publications in leading journals, such as the British Medical Journal, Social Science & Medicine and Sociology of Health & Illness. He has more than 250 peer-reviewed publications and conference presentations, supported by grants from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the Fonds de Recherche du Québec (FRQ).

Dr Pierre Pluye is Full Professor at the Department of Family Medicine (McGill University); Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences (CAHS); Senior Research Scholar, Quebec Health Research Funds (FRQS); Director, Method Development, Quebec SPOR SUPPORT Unit (Patient Oriented Research); and Associate Member of the School of Information Studies (McGill University). Pierre has worked as a General Practitioner in France, has a PhD in Public Health & Health Promotion (University of Montréal), and is a full-time researcher, Specialist in Family Medicine (College of Physicians of Quebec). In 2017, he received the 'Researcher of the Year Award' from the College of Family Physicians of Canada (CFPC). He obtained Investigator Awards from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the FRQS. He has expertise in mixed methods research and mixed studies reviews (including quantitative, qualitative and mixed methods studies). His current studies are funded by the CIHR, the National Research Council of Canada (NRC), and professional and philanthropic organizations. They are aimed to better understand and improve information outcomes associated with electronic knowledge resources (collective intelligence, information delivery and retrieval, information users' feedback, and social media), including outcomes on clinicians, managers, patients and the public (health and wellbeing outcomes).

Dr. Samira Abbasgholizadeh-Rahimi Eng. Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at McGill University, scientist at Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research of the Jewish General Hospital, and regular member of Cardiometabolic Health Diabetes and Obesity research network (CMOD), Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and Association for the Advancement of Artificial

Intelligence (AAAI). She completed her postdoctoral training at Family and Emergency Medicine Department of Université Laval, and her doctorate studies (in Industrial and System Engineering with focus on health care systems) at Mechanical Engineering Department of Université Laval. Dr. Rahimi is the recipient of numerous scholarships, fellowships, and awards among them the 2015 Canada Women in Engineering award of IEEE. She has worked on several Artificial Intelligence (AI)-related projects in different contexts (e.g. clinical, manufacturing), and currently is co-leading an international Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)-funded project on the efficient use of AI in community-based primary health care. With an interdisciplinary background, Dr. Rahimi is interested in development, evaluation, and implementation of clinical decision support tools, and patient decision aids, as well as integrating human-centered AI tools in health. She specializes in computational intelligence, decision making, and applied operational research in health.

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Dr. Kathleen Rice holds a PhD in Anthropology (University of Toronto, 2015), and is coming to McGill from an appointment as a CIHR-funded Postdoctoral Fellow at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health and Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Toronto. She has previously held appointments at the Ki Ka Shing Knowledge Institute at St Michael’s Hospital, the Centre for Health Services Sciences at Sunnybrook Hospital, and in the Social Aspects of HIV Unit of the Human Sciences Research Council in Cape Town, South Africa. Kathleen’s theoretical and methodological expertise are in the areas of social theories of power and inequity, and ethnography. Her specific areas of focus include rural and remote health, gender, generation, human rights, and medical education, both in rural Canada and Southern Africa. She currently holds a SSHRC Insight Development Grant entitled "Migration, Mines, and Marginalization: An Ethnography of Transformation in Ontario Resource Towns,” which focuses on the health and social care needs of low-income migrants who, having been priced out of housing in Southern Ontario, are now migrating to economically-depressed resource communities in Northwestern Ontario. She was recently awarded the Hunt Fellowship from the Wenner-Gren Foundation to fund the completion of her book, provisionally titled Rights and Responsibilities: Gender, Personhood, and the Crisis of Meaning in Rural South Africa. Kathleen has taught at the undergraduate and graduate level in the disciplines of anthropology, family medicine, and public health. Recent publications can be found in the journals Academic Medicine, Social Science & Medicine, and the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (among others).

Dr. Charo Rodríguez completed her studies in Medicine at the University of Alicante, Spain, in 1983. She obtained an MSc in Public Health (Management) at the University of Valencia, Spain, in 1992, and

completed a PhD in Public Health (Health Care Organization) at the University of Montreal in 2001. After a CIHR-awarded Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Faculties of Medicine and Management at McGill University, she was appointed at the McGill Department of Family Medicine in 2003, where she currently is Associate Professor. Her research program includes two main streams: organizational studies in healthcare organizations and medical education. She was awarded Research Scholar by the Fonds de recherche du Quebec en santé (FRQS) from 2004 to 2016. She was also awarded the 2013-2014 Cruess Faculty Scholarship in Medical Education. Since 2015, she is Director of the Family Medicine Educational Research Group (FMER), and Director of the MSc in Family Medicine – Medical Education option.

Dr. Ellen Rosenberg practices family medicine and teaches medical students and residents in the Family Medicine Centre of St. Mary’s Hospital. She has conducted research addressing the doctor-patient relationship in primary care. In particular, a study of the psychological effects of diagnosing hyperlipemia in children demonstrated high levels of behaviour problems in these children. Other work identified particular communication behaviours associated with higher rates of detection of mental disorders by primary care physicians. A clinical trial assessed the impact of physician prescription of physical activity, using a pedometer to quantify it, on cardiovascular health of people with hypertension or diabetes. In work examining care of individuals born outside of Canada, she and her colleagues identified effective physician and patient communication strategies as well as sources of difficulties. Her work has improved understanding of primary care medical services for patients with limited proficiency in English or French from the perspectives of the patients, family interpreters, professional interpreters and family physicians. Telephone interpretation during clinic visits proved feasible and helpful in 2 clinics which had no previous access to interpreters. In her present work she is analysing the clinical impact of communication involving ad hoc interpreters in an emergency department in Brussels.

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Dr Tibor Schuster, Assistant Professor at the Department, accomplished his early academic and professional education at the Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) of Munich and the Institute for Medical Statistics and Epidemiology at the Technical University of Munich (TUM). He obtained his doctorate in Biostatistics from

the Faculty of Mathematics, Informatics and Statistics at the LMU. Subsequently, he received a post-doctoral award from the Canadian Network of Observational Drug Effect Studies (CNODES) and carried out a post-doctoral fellowship in pharmacoepidemiology at the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill University and the Centre for Clinical Epidemiology, Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research in Montreal. He continued with a research fellowship at the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute in Melbourne where he was acting Director of Biostatistics at the newly established Melbourne Children’s Trial Centre in 2015. He is holder of a Tier II Canada Research Chair in Biostatistical Methods for Primary Care Research. Dr Schuster’s main methodological interests are in the development and application of causal inference methods for the design and analysis of cluster randomized controlled trials and observational research studies based on administrative or electronic medical / health record data.

Dr. Isabelle Vedel is a public health physician and an Associate Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at McGill University. She is also an investigator at the Lady Davis Institute at the Sir Mortimer B. Davis - Jewish General Hospital. She did her PhD and post-doctoral fellowship in health service research in chronic disease management (health care services organization, health management, information technology). She has received an Junior 2 salary award from the Fonds de la Recherche en Santé du Québec and a Dawson Scholar. Dr. Isabelle Vedel’s research interests are mainly in health care organization and primary health care services for persons with multiple chronic diseases and older patients. Her research work focuses on health services research in chronic disease management, particularly Alzheimer’s or related disorders.

Dr. Yvonne Steinert is a clinical psychologist and Professor of Family Medicine. She is also the Director of the Centre for Medical Education and the Richard and Sylvia Cruess Chair in Medical Education. Her educational interests relate to teaching and learning in medicine, the impact of faculty development on the individual and the organization, and the continuing professional development of faculty members.

Dr. Mark Ware practices pain medicine at the Montreal General Hospital and the CLSC Ouest de L'Isle. Dr. Ware has received research funding from the CIHR and salary support up the level of chercheur-boursier clinicien senior from the FRSQ. He teaches clinical pain management, including pharmacology, complementary approaches to chronic pain and the neurobiology of pain. His research focuses on the safety, efficacy and effectiveness of cannabis and cannabinoids in pain and symptom management. His educational work is focused on improving pain education at all level of the medical curriculum (undergraduate, postgraduate and continuing medical education). He is also Executive Director of the non-profit Canadian Consortium for the Investigation of Cannabinoids (CCIC).

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c

Tenured Professor of Family Medicine, and affiliated with the St.Mary’s Hospital Centre, Dr. Mark Yaffe’s research interests include: (1) Family Caregiving: (a) impact of caregiving on lifespan developmental tasks;

(b) aspects of caregiving for depression, stroke, cancer, and other illnesses; (c) factors that impact on the interface between family physicians and caregivers; (d) teaching caregiver issues to families and medical trainees;(e) ethical issues. (2) Elder Abuse: (a) development of detection tools for different settings; (b) roles, responsibilities, and competencies of different professionals in identifying mistreatment; (c) elder abuse knowledge translation; see the Elder Abuse Suspicion Index (3) Depression: (a) detection and management in adults (b) defining, diagnosing, and measuring the experience of collaborative care in depression diagnosis and treatment; (c) self-care (4) Chronic illness: coaching patient and caregiver self-care; roles of family, friends, and caregivers; factors affecting admission and re-admission to hospital. (5) Doctor-Patient Relationship: Use of patients’ and families’ unsolicited correspondence written words to identify what they value in the doctor-patient encounter.

Assistant Professor in the Department of Family Medicine and Division of Geriatric

Medicine, Dr. Machelle Wilchesky’s research interests include: Dementia, Quality of medical and nursing care for the frail elderly residing in Long-Term Care facilities, Pharmacoepidemiology, Optimal medication use in patients with dementia, De-prescribing, Delirium superimposed on dementia, Neuropsychiatric symptoms of dementia and Epidemiology.

Clinician Scholars, Adjunct & Associate Members of the Research Team [Clinicians] Marc Afilalo, Sanjay Aggarwal, Roxane Arel, Magali Bigras, Brigitte Côté, Joe Cox, Jerrald Dankoff, David Dannenbaum, Maxine Dumas-Pilon, Laura Haiek, John Hughes, Daniel Ince-Cushman, Vania Jimenez, Leonora Lalla, David Luckow, Michael Malus, Stephanie Morel, Marie Munoz, Marie-Jo Ouimet, Alan Pavilanis, Balbina Russillo, Norman Sabin, Eli Segal, Peter Steinmetz, Pierre-Paul Tellier, Anna Towers, Eric Tremblay, Bernard Unger, Layla Younes; [Associate Members] Sara Ahmed, Susan Bartlett, David Buckeridge, Carolyn Ells, Jennifer Fishman, Richard Hovey, Francesca Luconi, Melissa, Patricia Tak Sam Li, Daniel Weinstock, Meredith Young. [Adjunct Members] Tracie Barnett, Julie Bruneau, Edeltraut Kröger, Brenda MacGibbon, Marie-Thérèse Lussier, Catherine Hudon, Christian Rochefort, Janusz Kaczorowski.

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Research Division Activities

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Research Seminars in 2018

“Family Medicine: An Academic and Clinical Discipline at the Heart of Canadian Health Care” Howard Bergman (January 18, 2018)

“What are the Outcomes of Using Online Consumer Health

Information, and How Can We Prevent the Pitfals?” Reem El-Sherif (February 8, 2018)

“Living Systematic Reviews: A Novel Approach for Reducing Research Waste and Advancing the Science in Diabetes Quality Improvement Interventions” Sathya Karunananthan (February 22, 2018)

“The Quebec CoMPAS+ Program: Improving Primary Care and Health Services in Quebec/ Le Programme CoMPAS+ au Québec : Au Service

de l’Amélioration des Soins et Services de Première Ligne au Québec” Marie-Pascale Pomey (March 15, 2018)

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“Think and Speak Genomic! How Precision medicine and Big Data are Changing Decision Making in Health Care” Amalia Issa (April 12, 2018)

“What Does It Mean to Support Causal Policy Claims with Science?

The Unintended Consequences of Celebrating Pluralism” Mathieu Ouimet (June 11, 2018)

“Big Participatory Research” Neil Andersson (September 13, 2018)

“Cultural Safety and Intercultural Dialogue in Family Medicine”

Ivan Sarmiento & Juan Pimental (October 4, 2018) “Patient Engagement in Primary Health Care Research: Practical Applications and Challenges” Anne-Marie Chomat (November 1, 2018)

“Participation and Primary Health Care in Humanitarian Settings”

Christina Zarowsky & Loubna Belaid (November 22, 2018) “Demystifying Scoping Reviews: Best Practices and Applications in Clinical Practice and Health Professions Education” Aliki Thomas (December 13, 2018)

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Dr. Hirsh Rosenfeld Annual Public Distinguished Lecture

“Old Age Ain’t for Sissies: How to Live to 120” Presentation given by Dr. Mark Clarfield

May 29, 2018 Ste-Mary’s Hospital 3830, Avenue Lacombe, Montréal, Qc, H3T 1M5

In this lecture, Dr. Clarfield explored the fascinating biology of aging, and why it is so challenging in our present day and age. The presentation’s interest was a success and greeted more than a hundred attendants.

The Dr. Hirsh Rosenfeld Annual Distinguished Lecture is organized by the St. James Literary Society. Visit: https://www.stjamesliterarysociety.com/, for more information on their activities and mission.

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4th Annual McGill Family Medicine Research Symposium May 30, 2019 ● Thomson House. 3650, rue McTavish

This annual symposium gives us the opportunity to celebrate our McGill Family Medicine Graduate Study Program and appreciate the quality and depth of research of 30 students and research professionals, with presentations that cover a wide range of exciting research areas. It is also a chance to encourage collaboration between the clinical, resident training and research arms of the department. The day is also an opportunity for students to network with their peers and faculty members, and to create strong bonds within our community.

Organized by the Family Medicine Students’ Society, this year’s symposium featured Dr. Mark Clarfield as keynote speaker, as well as a panel of four Scientists and Physicians, who discussed with our students about their professional experience:

“How to Publish in

Good Medical Journal & How to Deal with

Refusals”

“How I ended up running a medical school”

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Student topics presented this year at the symposium: “A mixed methods study evaluation the clinical information needs of Canadian long-term care family physicians” Erica Marrone

“A mixed methods study examining the support networks of marginalized young women in Botswana for HIV prevention” David Loutfi

“A mixed methods study of potentially avoidable acute care transfers from six long-term care facilities in Quebec” Deniz Cetin-Sahin

“A qualitative approach for informing prior distributions of factor loadings in Bayesian questionnaire validation” Hao Zhang

“A secrete choice experiment of users’ preferences for non-invasive cardiovascular diagnostic imaging technologies” Thomas Bertrand

“A systematic mixed studies review and narrative synthesis of oncologists’ perceptions of palliative care for advanced cancer patients” Caitlin Stoddart

“Cree youth health and youth engagement in health planning” Nickoo Merati

“Culturally informed views on breast cancer screening among immigrant women in multi-cultural societies: A qualitative mini literature review” Nina Mamishi

“Developing a new tool to measure usability for a blended learning initiative in faculty development and medical education” Anish Arora

“Exploring knowledge, attitudes and practices related to non-communicable diseases among community health agents in Sao Paulo, Brazil” Catherine Ji

“Features of smartphone interventions that improve chronic disease management: A rapid review” Arieh Gomolin “Identifying typologies of care for women living with HIV in Canada: key findings for targeted interventions” Nadia O’Brien

“Impact of transitional care interventions for older patients living in nursing homes: A systematic review and meta-analysis study” Mélanie LeBerre

“Long-term azithromycin therapy to reduce acute exacerbations in patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease” Nadia Naderi

“Multi-stakeholder partnerships to promote access to primary health care for vulnerable populations; Qualitative results” Katya Loban

“Part-time clinician, part-time educator, part-time learner – full time family doctor: Exploring the lived experiences of clinical teachers on their multiple professional identities” David Ortiz-Paredes

“Patient-centered analysis of suggested changes to the assisted human reproductive act – A health policy review” Mary Henein

“Peruvian rural physician deficit: Understanding where we are and where we should go” José Andrés Morales

“Prescribing issues in primary care: do prescribers consider weight modulating effects of antidepressants?” Svetlana Puzhko

“Prescribing patterns for Major Neurocognitive Disorder among primary care physicians in the United Kingdom: a population-based inception cohort” Kayte Anderson

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“Processes and outcomes of organizational participatory research partnerships in health: A systematic mixed studies review with framework synthesis” Josh Hamzeh

“Safe motherhood with cultural safety in Indigenous communities of Guerrero, Mexico: a participatory cluster randomized controlled trial” Ivan Sarmiento

“The experience of senior medical students participating in a pilot cultural safety training program in Colombia: a qualitative descriptive study based on the Most Significant Change narrative technique” Juan Pimentel

“The future of primary care? Using the case management intervention to address the rising burden of chronic illness and aging in Canadian healthcare” Matthew Hacker Tepper

“The impact of continuity of primary care on outcomes for children with asthma: A population-based retrospective cohort study in Quebec, Canada” Sarah Cooper

“The impact on cardiometabolic and mental health factors of a web-based lifestyle intervention program among Canadian military personnel” Jasmine Chang

“Training community health workers in Ecuador: A case study on cultural competent strategies used in a cross-cultural context” Laura Rojas-Rozo

“Trends in primary care continuity and acute hospital use in community-dwelling person with dementia in Quebec from 2000 to 2015” Claire Godard-Sebillotte

“Using Patient-Oriented Evidence that Matters(TM) to explore physician perspectives on mammography screening for average-risk women” Sophia Siedlikowski

“Variations in health system performance for men and women diagnosed with dementia following new primary care models in Ontario” Nadia Sourial

“What factors are associated with the reversal of medical practices in clinical trials relevant to primary healthcare?” Christian Ruchon

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Isaac Tannenbaum Family Medicine Resident Research Day 2018

The Isaac Tannenbaum Resident Research Day is an annual event that brings together our residents and clinician teachers from our 9 university family medicine groups, and which recognizes the scholarly projects completed by our residents in Family Medicine. The Isaac Tannenbaum Resident Research Day is conjointly organized by the Postgraduate, Research and Faculty Development divisions in the Department of Family Medicine and is funded by the Postgraduate Program of Family Medicine and by the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University. Tannenbaum Fellows 2017-2018 Kayte Andersen, Thomas Bertrand, Jamie DeMore, Anna Dion, Justin Gagnon, Jenny Jing, Stephanie Long, Shinjini Mondal, Svetlana Puzhko, Vaso Rahimzadeh, Ayat Salman, Sophia Siedlikowski and Caitlin Stoddart. Dr. Matthieu Calafiore, our international judge from Lille, France.

Tannenbaum Residents Dr. Tamara Ibrahim, Jewish General Hospital

“Reducing low value healthcare: The case of Colace”

Dr. Amélie Beaudoin, Dr. Rosemarie Bergeron-Drew, Dre Marie-Pier Leduc and Dr Noémie Nadeau, GMF-U de l’Outaouais

“Utilisation de la Varénicline (Champix®) en contexte de cessation tabagique chez les patients connus pour troubes de santé mentale”

Dr. Jamie Abitbol, Dr. Tanya Marciano and Dr. Sabrina Ouahnoun,

Ste-Mary’s Hospital “Early Introduction of peanuts decreases allergies;

A survey inquiring on parents’ awareness of this topic”

Dr. François Venne, GMF-U de la Vallée de l’Or “Le sevrage alcoolique chez les patients hospitalisés :

mieux dépister pour mieux traiter”

Dr. Alex Nguyen and Dr. Ryan Yousefi, Jewish General Hospital “Screening for iron deficiency in pregnancy?”

Dr. Annick Gauthier, Ste-Mary’s Hospital

“Awareness of congenital cytomegalovirus infections among family physicians compared to obstetricians”

Dr. Éric Chétrit and Dr. Philippe Pépin, CLSC Métro

“Urinary tract infections: Are we following guidelines?”

June 1st, 2018

Crowley Art Center 5325, Avenue Crowley

Montréal, Qc, H4A 2C6

Organization Committee Dr. Marion Dove, Postgraduate Director Ms. Julie Lane, Postgraduate Administrator Ms. Alana Walsh-Ferland, Postgraduate Coordinator Dr. Gillian Bartlett, Research & Graduate Program Director Ms. Sherrie Child, Graduate Program Administrator Dr. Audrey Juras, Faculty Development Director

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Dr. Isabel Gonzales Carranza, Dr. Divya Markandey, Dr. Alda Rroshaj and Dr. Paolo Roy, GMF-U de l’Outaouais

“Hypertension artérielle : Suivons-nous les nouvelles lignes directrices?”

Dr. Laurence Quesnel, Ste-Mary’s Hospital “Common factors that influence the level of comfort of Family Physicians and Family Medicine

Residents with regards to providing comprehensive care for transgender and gender non-conforming patient populations”

Dr. Catherine Courteau, GMF-U Jardins-Roussillon

“Using literature to promote reflection in medical school: A pilot reading module as part of McGill’s physician Aprenticeship Course”

Dr. Katharina Schumacher and Dr. Margaux Beauchemin,

CLSC Côte-des-Neiges “Assessment of mindfulness stress reduction session

to decrease burnout among residents”

Dr. Yun Gao and Dr. Mia Hecht, Queen Elizabeth Health Center “A systematic review on advance care planning in

non-palliative patients in the outpatient setting”

Dr. Yilin Zhao, GMF-U Jardins-Roussilon “Titre de projet: Facilitateurs et barriers au dépistage du cancer du sein chez la population immigrante

chinoise au Canada – Une revue de littérature”

Dr. Vanessa Pasztor, Dr. Joyce Chen and Dr. Michael Souedian, Jewish General Hospital

“Bridging the gap in adolescent pain management”

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Pizza & Politics in 2018 Our 2018 Pizza & Politics has facilitated multiple discussions on current policies in primary care such as medical-assistance in dying among others. One of the highlights of P&P last year was the Roundtable Discussion: Getting Back to the Basics of Primary Care in Quebec where the panelists were Former Quebec ministers Claude Castonguay, Jean Rochon and Michel Clair, and Antonia Maioni, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Professor in the Department of Political Science at McGill who were in an open discussion with the students and faculty from the department.

Family Medicine Graduate Students’ Society

Pizza & Politics

The Family Medicine Graduate Students’ Society in 2018 Our 2018 FMGSS Council was active in different aspects. From the academic side, they were able to apply the mentorship program where they paired new and returning students from the department. They also organized sessions on instructions for scholarship applications (FRQS & CIHR). From the social aspect, FMGSS held multiple events that aimed at giving the students the chance to socialize outside the academic borders. These events included soccer tournaments organized with McGill University, apple picking, Christmas party as well as other events.

FMGSS Council 2017-2018: V. Rahimzadeh, S. Mondal, S. Puzhko, S. Long, N. Merati, K. Andersson, K. Andersson, B. Thomas

FMGSS Council 2018-2019: C. Ji, R. ElSherif, J. Pimentel, L. Skerritt, A. Arora, A. Horton, E. Marrone, M. Hacker-Tepper, M.

Henein, L. Rojas, H. Zhang, C. Ruchon

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Family Medicine & McGill Observatory Seminar Series “The Current State of Québec’s Primary Care”

October 22nd, 2018

Former Quebec ministers Claude Castonguay, Jean Rochon and Michel Clair, together with Antonia Maioni, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Professor in the Department of Political Science at McGill, exchanged ideas with students and faculty members from McGill University’s Department of Family Medicine during a packed event on October 22, 2018. The panelists engaged the audience in a frank conversation about the current state of primary care in Quebec. […]

Claude Castonguay, Jean Rochon & Howard Bergman

[…] The panel reflected on the policies of the outgoing Liberal government, particularly the reforms established by former Health and Social Services Minister Gaétan Barrette, including Bill 10: An Act to modify the organization and governance of the health and social services network and Bill 20: An Act to promote access to family medicine and specialized medicine services and to amend various legislative provisions relating to assisted procreation. […]

Michel Clair, Antonia Maioni, Claude Castonguay & Jean Rochon

[…] Despite their different views, political affiliations and backgrounds, all panelists shared a common vision for the future of primary care, which includes a change of governance approach and management styles, and an increased collaboration with health care professionals. […] Read the full article on the event:https://publications.mcgill.ca/medenews/2018/12/06/roundtable-discussion-getting-back-to-the-basics-of-primary-care-in-quebec/

This event was organized by the Department of Family Medicine, in collaboration with the McGill Observatory on Health and Social Services Reforms, as well as with Pizza & Politics, a collaborative student-led initiative to encourage graduate students and junior primary care researchers to explore, discuss and debate current issues in Canadian health care policy.

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Research Groups

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McGill Primary Health Care Research Network (PBRN) The PBRN currently comprises 11 clinical sites: 9 Family Medicine Groups (GMF-U), including 3 CLSC (Local Center for Community Services), 1 community Family Medicine Group and 1 multidisciplinary non-profit perinatal care center. Jeannie Haggerty is scientific director. Peter Nugus act as an assistant director. Nadjib Mokraoui is the PBRN coordinator. Since July 2018, the PBRN has an operating group of clinicians, researchers and patient partner. This group helps to develop connection strategies with our network and make operational decisions related to the PBRN. The McGill PBRN is a member of Réseau-1 Québec, a knowledge exchange network funded by the Fonds de Recherche du Québec – Santé (FRQS), from which it received infrastructure funding in 2018. Réseau-1 federates the PBRNs associated to the four academic departments of family medicine in Quebec and the main common project in 2018 was to conduct an assessment of the research readiness of the member clinics; it is currently ongoing at McGill and it is almost done. In 2018, the Quebec SUPPORT Unit renewed its financial support for the four PBRNs to develop research skills in facilitation. Two posters on research facilitation, led by our McGill PBRN, were presented to 2018 NAPCRG PBRN Conference at Bethesda. Three projects responded to the call for development projects, and another three responded to the call for projects on research innovations 2018-2019 of Réseau-1 Québec.

2018 Operating PBRN Group: Dr. Jeannie Haggerty, Dr. Peter Nugus, Dr. Roland Grad, Dr. Ellen Rosenberg, Dr. Jamieson Clark, Dr. Annabelle Levesque-Chouinard, Dr. Myriam St-Pierre, Dr. Ariane Courville-LeBouyonnec, Alexis Théberge-Lamy, Dr. Nadjib Mokraoui, Matt Hacker Teper, Leora Simon, Lucie Lambert.

@McGillPBRN

mcgillpbrn/

https://www.mcgill.ca/familymed/research/projects/mcgill-network1

Email: [email protected]

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Quebec SPOR SUPPORT Unit – Method Development component

As part of CIHR’s Strategy for Patient Oriented Research (SPOR), Support for People and Patient-Oriented Research and Trials (SUPPORT) Units have been implemented across the country. The Quebec SPOR SUPPORT Unit has an online services portal via which Patient Oriented Research (POR) researchers, decision makers, managers, clinicians, and patient-partners may request POR research support. The Method Development component is hosted in our department. Over 3 years (2016-2018), this component has supported the publication of 148 products (e.g., peer reviewed journal articles, book chapters, conference presentations, and research reports), 36 workshops and seminars, and over 35 methodological development initiatives ranging from web applications and R code, to validated survey questionnaires and method toolkits. These initiatives range from 6 to 24 months in duration and $5000 - $100 000 in cost. A website houses and showcases the methods tools and services (soutiensrapmetho.ca). The component is working on five large-scale developments. First, the component implements guidelines for Organizational Participatory Research (OPR), i.e., partnerships between academic researchers and health organizations such as primary care settings, which are being becoming policies or guidance in national governmental agencies. Second, it continues to support the Canada Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROM) initiative in the transcultural adaptation (translation from English to Quebec French) of PROM for chronic pain. Third, the component has continued to develop the collaborative research trend monitoring system eSRAP, developing a “Do-It-Yourself” system that users will be able to tailor to their needs. Fourth, the Dynamic Description of Services online platform was launched in February 2018 (ddsquebec.ca). This platform allows users to obtain descriptive tables of various parameters of health clinics across Quebec. Users’ evaluations are very positive; thus, further development is underway. Fifth, following, a positive analysis of opportunity for CartoRAP, an online platform to map Patient Oriented Research across Quebec and Canada, the component has begun the operational planning on this initiative.

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Since the Unit’s inception, the Method Development component has partnered with 61 researchers in 5 Quebec universities, 28 patient-partners, 14 clinicians and 9 health organization managers. It has supported 22 graduate students and postdoctoral fellows engaged in patient-oriented research. These students have collectively won 26 fellowships, scholarships, grants, and salary awards. In our department, the Method Development component supports the McGill PBRN, and helps 5 researchers, 3 clinicians and 12 graduate students, also the leaders for Quality Improvement to develop relevant tools, methods and method toolbox. Finally, the component works closely with philanthropic organizations, as well as the National Research Council (NRC) and the Quebec Institute for Excellence in Health Social Services (INESSS).

The Quebec SPOR SUPPORT Unit’s Method Development component will continue to work on the methodological development priorities identified by the POR community, while responding to requests that arrive via the Quebec-SPOR SUPPORT Unit’s services portal.

https://soutiensrapmetho.ca/

Dev.metho.Unitedesoutien.SRAP.QC/

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Participatory Research At McGill (PRAM) Researchers working in partnerships with those affected by issues being studied, or those who must use the results, for the purpose of creating and translating knowledge for action or change in health practice or policy, or individual, community or population health. Participatory Research at McGill (PRAM), led by Professor Neil Andersson, aims to further scholarship on participatory research; promote expertise and training in participatory research; and increase community and patient engagement in health care. In 2018 PRAM trained 8 PhD and 2 postdoctoral fellows; the group developed and delivers graduate (FMED603, FMED604, FMED615, FMED506 and FMED621). Prof Andersson is a co-director of the McGill Institute of Human Development and Wellbeing, responsible for the research axis on Participation across the Life-course and a co-principal investigator of the national ACCESS Open Minds program on youth mental health. Current PRAM priorities include developing research methods with a concern for issues of cultural safety and a special focus on intercultural dialogue and integrated knowledge translation. PRAM applies participatory research principles in adaptive management of primary health care, in patient engagement and patient-centred outcomes, and in development of the empowering participatory research dynamic as a health relevant intervention. The PRAM Patient Engagement initiative, supported by a post-doctoral fellow and a patient partner with funding from the RUIS, developed a network of 15 patient-engagement work-groups across McGill and a training program on patient engagement for researchers. The long-term PRAM partnership with the Kahnawake Schools Diabetes Prevention Program led to funding of the five university Quebec Indigenous Health Mentorship Network, housed in PRAM and directed by Dr Alex McComber, the newly appointed indigenous lead in the Department.

https://mcgill.ca/familymed/research/projects/pram

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Contributing to Global Primary Health Care

The Department’s Global Health Program, one of McGill’s contribution to global primary health care (PHC), delivered several key results in 2018 in education, research and research capacity strengthening through enhanced partnerships. Please see also key results from CIET-PRAM.

Fifty seven medical, nursing, dentistry, PT/OT and other McGill students completed successfully the 2018 Inter-professional Global Health Course, coordinated by the Department for the Faculty. This course offering provides a unique opportunity to McGill students interested in global health to learn in an inter-professional setting. The course is offered in the evening so as to better accommodate the busy daytime schedules of students in the health professions. The three-credit graduate course Program Management in Global Health and Primary Health Care, was offered during the Winter term with strong class participation and excellent reviews. Both of these courses contribute to the Faculty’s growing course offerings in global health. Twelve graduate students and postdocs are carrying out their research on a global health subject, many in a developing country setting, contributing to international conference presentations and abstracts including at WONCA, NAPCRAG and the Family Medicine Forum of the College of Family Physicians of Canada, with theses and manuscripts in progress.

A long-standing partnership with Ecuador contributes to capacity strengthening of community health workers and provides opportunities for McGill medical student electives and collaborative work. Partnerships in Southern Africa and Nigeria are described under CIET/PRAM. A partnership with Santa Marcelina was established in 2017 with a view to strengthen family medicine training and research capacity to enhance primary health care (PHC) delivery for around two million people in poorer neighborhoods of Sao Paolo, Brazil. A blended learning faculty development program was started. To contribute to research capacity strengthening, two family physician trainers from Santa Marcelina joined the Department’s MSc Program and six research projects were undertaken or planned collaboratively, including around the contributions of community health workers, the use of electronic medical records to improve PHC and PHC research priority setting.

This unique partnership was supported by regular video conferences and visits. A new partnership with Shenzhen in China is also contributing to faculty development through blended learning. A partnership with Haiti is under development with a view to strengthen family medicine training initially in two sites and eventually to contribute to strengthening primary health care in the country; the implementation of this partnership was delayed due to political instability in the country. The Department is exploring with the World Health Organization, the creation of a McGill WHO Collaborating Centre in Primary Health Care to contribute to knowledge sharing on the organization of PHC towards the Sustainable Development Goal of Universal Health Coverage. The Department is looking forward to synergise with the new School of Population and Global Health.

https://www.mcgill.ca/familymed/global-health

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Researchers Teams

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Community Information and Epidemiological Technologies (CIET) CIET is a group of non-profit foundations, charities, non-governmental organisations and institutes dedicated to building the community voice into planning. Professor Neil Andersson started CIET, Centro de Investigación de Enfermedades Tropicales (Tropical Disease Research Centre), in Mexico in 1985 to promote wider participation in health planning. In Canada, the name became "Community Information and Epidemiological Technologies," reflecting the broader application of epidemiological methods to research areas beyond the health field. CIET has offices in Botswana, Mexico, Nicaragua, Pakistan, South Africa, Nigeria, Canada, England and the United States of America. CIET research interests shift with the needs of its partner communities, from health to education, from agriculture to micro-regional development, from the impact of land mines to monitoring child rights, from public transport to the justice system. By involving community members in information gathering and analysis, CIET helps them participate, in an increasingly informed way, in decisions that affect their lives. Active CIET-PRAM research projects in 2018 included a cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) of a structural intervention for HIV prevention in young women in Botswana, a cluster RCT of universal home visits to engage men in pregnancy care and childbirth in Nigeria, an exploratory study about kunika (lack of child spacing) in Nigeria, a cluster RCT working with traditional midwives to promote safe birth in cultural safety in indigenous groups in Mexico, a RCT testing game learning for intercultural medical education in Colombia, two pilot RCTs promoting Mayan indigenous group dynamics in safe birth in Guatemala and a seed project of safe birth in northern Uganda. Research projects in Botswana, Nigeria, Uganda, Colombia, Mexico, and Guatemala offer graduate students opportunities for thesis work on priority issues for these countries, including HIV, cultural safety and maternal health.

https://mcgill.ca/familymed/research/projects/ciet

http://ciet.org/

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The Information Technology Primary Care Research Group (ITPCRG)

The Artificial Intelligence in Family Medicine at McGill (AIFM)

The Artificial Intelligence in Family Medicine at McGill (AIFM) The McGill Artificial Intelligence in Family Medicine (AIFM) team has been launched in 2018. The team mission is to create, develop and validate practice-based AI solutions for family medicine and community based primary health care. The team combines the strengths of clinical sciences, computer and information sciences, engineering, epidemiology and humanities. It involves more than 15 clinicians, researchers and graduate students working on bibliographic databases, biobanks, EMR and health administrative databases in a variety of areas such as collective information, complex care needs, continuing education, multiple chronic conditions, clinical decision aids, drug-drug interactions, and health services and policy. Team members lead or co-lead more than 20 project with multiple institutions such as CNODES, CRC in Data Mining and Data Security, INESSS, Quebec SPOR SUPPORT Unit, and RALI. These projects reflect two interdependent streams of AI: big data analysis and human computer interaction. The team has presented an AI workshop in the McGill Family Medicine Annual Departmental Retreat “Leveraging BIG DATA for Family Physicians: Identifying Our Needs” in October 2018.

The Information Technology Primary Care Research Group (ITPCRG)

Led by Roland Grad and Pierre Pluye, the Information Technology Primary Care Research Group continued to be an active space for integrating medical students, graduate students (MSc and PhD) visiting professors and postdoctoral fellows. In 2018, group members met face-to-face 14 times and delivered a workshop at the annual retreat. For further information, please visit:

https://www.mcgill.ca/familymed/research/projects/itpcrg

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Research on Organization of healthcare Services for Alzheimers (ROSA) Since 2014, we developed a brand new network of the best Canadian health service researchers. Our cross-provincial multidisciplinary Team, initially composed of 14 members, attracted new researchers as our program evolved. Our team is now composed of 11 Co-Principal Investigators, 20 co-investigators, and 19 collaborators from Quebec, Ontario and New Brunswick. We recruited and trained 4 undergraduate students, 9 Master’s students, and 9 Doctoral students, 22 highly qualified professionals (e.g. research associates, research nurses, biostatisticians, etc.) in three provinces. To build capacity within our research sites, we have engaged patients, caregivers, clinicians, managers and decision-makers (deputy ministers), provincial and Canadian Alzheimer societies heavily in the research process through our Provincial (QC, NB, ON) and Canadian (other provinces) Councils. We also put in place an International Council (Netherlands, USA, Mexico, UK, France, Israel, China, Japan and PAHO/WHO). These three councils make up the bulk of our knowledge mobilization team. Bringing together this varied team from different, yet complementary disciplines has resulted in a strong collaborative effort and a fertile research environment. As a testament to our team’s collective expertise and knowledge mobilization, Dr. H. Bergman was asked to chair the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences panel charged with developing recommendations for a federal dementia strategy. Joining him are Team 19 investigators Drs. Vedel and McAiney. We recruited 33 primary care sites across 3 provinces. We developed and validated bilingual questionnaires measuring the organisational characteristics of the sites and the knowledge, attitudes and practices of physicians and nurses regarding dementia. We developed, prioritized, operationalized and validated a set of 60 indicators on quality of care and use of services that are used in the surveillance and excellence institutes across three provinces. We analyzed data from ICES (ON) on 318,350 PWD and from INSPQ (QC) on 190 000 PWD. Our team will receive data from the NBIRT (NB) in 2020. To date, we reviewed 2,300 charts of persons living with dementia (PWD) and collected 650 clinicians’ questionnaires and 33 organizational questionnaires. We conducted 118 interviews and focus groups for a total of 94 health care professionals, 12 Ministry representatives, and 12 PWD and caregivers. In addition to funding received from CCNA, we were able to leverage 2 additional $ for every $ invested by CCNA. Based on these results, we provided ongoing feedback to the participating FMGs on their results in order for them to improve their care processes. We also worked closely with the Ministries of Health, for instance, we have sent bi-annual reports to the Quebec Ministry of Health since 2014. General dissemination of the program’s results includes regular presentation to the research community. Since 2014, we have made 210 presentations at various national and international conferences (IAGG, ACIC, CAG, NAPCRG, RQRV…), we have published 61 articles. We participated as well in the development of six practice guidelines, three book chapters, one book and a web-based application applying Bayesian methods to support clinician-researchers in the validation of their questionnaires. We also endeavor to make our findings accessible to the general public through our website and the interviews our team members have given over the years in the media (e.g. Radio Canada).

Drs. Isabelle Vedel & Howard Bergman

https://www.mcgill.ca/familymed/research/projects/research-organization-healthcare-services-alzheimers-rosa

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The Family Medicine Educational Research Group (FMER)

To better meet current societal challenges while ensuring optimal performance and sustainability, healthcare delivery must become more flexible, collaborative, multidimensional, and better adapted to the needs of patients and populations. Family medicine, whose practice approach is centered on individuals in their natural environment, is the medical discipline called upon to play a determining role in the contemporary transformations of the Quebec and Canadian health care systems, and beyond. However, this responsibility also poses major professional, organizational and societal challenges to practicing family physicians. To discern transferable lessons about professional adaptation, our team grounds in more than a decade of educational innovations conceived and implemented in a family medicine academic department, which encompass all levels of academic training in family medicine, i.e. undergraduate, postgraduate, graduate (MSc, PhD and postdoctoral fellowship programs), faculty development, and continuing professional development.

These contributions in medical education have been accompanied by the development of more than 30 research projects financially supported by several funding agencies such as CIHR and SSHRC, an increasing number of publications in medical education, and the supervision of graduate students. The corollary of the process was the creation of the Family Medicine Education Research Group (FMER) in May 2014. The FMER currently includes 11 regular members, 7 national and international collaborators (4 of whom are professors and researchers in education) and 8 students (3 MSc in Family Medicine – Medical Education Concentration, 5 PhD students in Family Medicine and Primary Care). The FMER goal is to contribute to the advancement of knowledge to support family medicine educational innovations and academic excellence in continuing professional development of practicing and academic family physicians and the training of students (clinicians, clinician-researchers, researchers).

Based on the expertise developed, the FMER is a new university research team whose scientific program is structured in the following five axes of research: (1) information technologies in family physicians’ continuing professional development, (2) professional identity formation, (3) mentorship in family medicine education, (4) family medicine education program evaluation, (5) systematic reviews in medical education.

The FMER program currently includes 14 investigations, 9 of which are funded (3 in phase of knowledge transfer, 6 ongoing), 3 are under review by funding agencies, and 2 are in preparation. What motivates FMER researchers, collaborators, and associated graduate students to work together is their common goal to contribute to the development of medical education research in family medicine, a field of inquiry still poorly developed. What is more, as Quebec researchers, we aim to place our province as international leader in this emerging domain. Such a position will allow to further progress and attract the best and brightest master’s, doctoral students, and postdoctoral fellows in the years to come.

As part of the Family Medicine Research Division’s Research Seminar Series, the FMER contributed with 2 seminars in 2018 featuring Reem El-Sherif, on February 8, who gave a lecture on “What are the Outcomes of Using Online Consumer Health Information and How Can We Prevent the Pitfalls”; and Aliki Thomas & Meredith Young, on December 13, who discussed “Demystifying Scoping Reviews: Best Practices and Applications in Clinical Practice and Health Professions Education”.

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Research Outcomes & Administration

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Honours, Awards and Prizes Members of our Department continue to be very active at the university and involved in Faculty initiatives, including the development of the Faculty's Strategic Research Plan, the Postgraduate Education Program, the Undergraduate Curriculum Reform, the Faculty Leadership Council, the Centre for Medical Education and others. Here are some of the Awards received in 2018:

ResearchersThe Governor General of Canada Order of Canada Steinert, Yvonne

Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR) Health Systems Impact Fellowship Cockcroft, Anne

Mitacs Canada Elevate Fellowship Abbasgholizadeh-Rahimi, Samira

Graduate Students Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR) Canada Graduate Scholarship Master’s Award Marrone, Erica

Canada Graduate Scholarship Master’s Award Hacker Teper, Matthew

Canada Graduate Scholarship Master’s Award Henein, Mary

Canada Graduate Scholarship Master’s Award Silver, Hilah

Canada Graduate Scholarship Master’s Award Arora, Anish

Canada Graduate Scholarship Doctoral Award El Sherif, Reem

Canada Graduate Scholarship Doctoral Award Van Der Wal, Ran

Unicef Action against hunger [Scholarship] Ormel, Ilja

Fonds de Recherche du Québec en Santé FRQS MSc/MD Award Yang, Xin

FRQS Doctoral Award Sarmiento, Ivan

FRQS Doctoral Award Hamzeh, Joshua

FRQS Doctoral Award Makarenko, Iuliia

FRQS Doctoral Award Ormel, Ilja

FRQS Doctoral Award Pimentel, Juan Pablo

Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship Van Der Wal, Ran

McGill University Graduate Mobility Award Ormel, Ilja

Graduate Mobility Award Mondal, Shinjini

Graduate Mobility Award Archer, Jamal

Graduate Mobility Award Sarmiento, Ivan

Canadian Frailty Network (CFN) Interdisciplinary Fellowship Program (IFP) Yang, Xin

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https://www.mcgill.ca/familymed/research

Overview of Research Productivity The Research Division currently has 14 PhD researchers and 12 clinician-scientists, with over 20 associate or adjunct members who are actively involved in the graduate programs. In 2018, aside from scholarships and fellowships funding, our faculty members held $223.9 million in ongoing grants, and received $37.9 million in new grants during the year, including 2.9 million as principal investigators. Our researchers and students gave approximately 300 conference presentations and published 198 journal articles and books/book chapters. Dr. Samira Abbasgholizadeh-Rahimi and Dr. Kathleen Rice were hired as tenure-track assistant professors. We had our fourth annual Research Day on May 30, 2018, co-hosted with the Family Medicine Graduate Student Society. The event featured a keynote presentation by Dr. Mark Clarfield, student presentations, and an Expert Panel, which was a great success with 75 attendees.

Books & Book Chapters 28 Publications 170 Reports 13

Major research grants awarded in 2018 (as principal investigator/applicant):

• 2018-2022. Visca, Regina PA; Bibeau C, Dumas Pilon M, Lyddiatt A, Keely E, Salisbury G, Decoste J, morrison K, Ireland L, Cooper L, Inglemo P, Lundrigan P, Poulin P, Grad R, Nabelsi V, Shir Y, Dumont F, Singer AG, Liddy C, Breton M, Buckley N, Ahmed S. Improving Access to Specialist Care through eConsult for Patients Living with Chronic Pain. Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR). $1,129,141.00

• 2018-2022. Lebouché, Bertand PI. Antireroviral Speed Access Program. Gilead. $739,060.00 • 2018-2022. Lebouché, Bertand PA. Le 250: Salary grant for researcher in Family Medicine. FMOQ-

Ministry of Health Québec. $334,820.00 • 2018-2021. Vedel, Isabelle PI; Godard-Sebillotte C. Evaluation of integrated clinical guidelines with a

chronic disease management system for patients with multimorbidity in primary care. MEDTEQ-Fonds de soutien à l’innovation en Santé et en Services Sociaux. $257,307.00

• 2018-2020. Wilchesky, Machelle PA; Boruff J, Chertkow H, Cuijpers P, Gilbody S, Ismail Z, Levis B, McMilan D, Mitchell N, Monette J, Patten S, Shrier I, Steele R, Tonelli M, Ziegelstein R, Benedetti A, Thombs B. Improving Depression Screening in Geriatric Patients by Reducing Bias and Generating Individualized Accuracy Estimates: An Individualized Patient Data Meta-Analysis of the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS). Canadian Institue of Health Research (CIHR), Project Grant. $150,000.00

See the complete list of grants received in 2018 at https://www.mcgill.ca/familymed/files/familymed/2018_dfm_grant_list.pdf

Administration: Dr. Gillian Bartlett, Director Annick Beaudry, Coordinator

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Publication list Journal Articles

1. Hong QN, Pluye P. A conceptual framework for critical appraisal in systematic mixed studies reviews. Journal of Mixed Methods Research; April 21, 2018; 2018.

2. Easton NM, Aboushawareb SAE, Bearne SL. A continuous assay for L-talarate/galactarate dehydratase using circular dichroism. Analytical Biochemistry; 544 (March 1, 2018): 80-86; 2018.

3. Godard-Sebillotte C, Le Berre M, Karunananthan S, Hong QN, Vedel I. A digital media strategy to obtain unpublished data for a systematic review yields a very high author response rate. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology; 104 (December 2018): 141-143; 2018.

4. Hovey R, Rodriguez C. A novel source ofpatients’ and families’ written words to identify what they value in thedoctor-patient encounter. Inter J Whole Person Care; 5 (1): 65-66; 2018.

5. Cockcroft A, Kgakole L, Marokoane N, Andersson N. A role for traditional doctors in health promotion: experience from a trial of HIV prevention in Botswana. Global Heath Promotion; October 4, 2018; 2018.

6. Bush PL, Pluye P, Loignon C, Granikov V, Wright MT, Repchinsky C, Haggerty J, Bartlett G, Parry S, Pelletier J-F & Macaulay AC [I was the main mentor of the 1st author, and the main contributor after her]. A systematic mixed studies review on Organizational Participatory Research: toward practice guidelines. BMC Health Services Research; 18 (1): e992; 2018.

7. Pluye P, Garcia Bengoechea E, Granikov V, Kaur N, & Tang D. A World of Possibilities in Mixed Methods: Review of the Combinations of Strategies Used to Integrate the Phases, Results, and Qualitative and Quantitative Data [invited paper]. International Journal of Multiple Research Approaches; 10 (1): 41-56; 2018.

8. Cockcroft A, Marokoane N, Kgakole L, Tswetla N, Andersson N. Access of choice-disabled young women in Botswana to government structural support programmes: a cross-sectional study. AIDS Care; 30 (Sup 2): 1-4; 2018.

9. Siedlikowski S, Bartlett G, Grad RM et al. An exploration of physician perspectives on mammography screening for average-risk women. BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine; 23 (2018): A53-A54; 2018.

10. De Pokomandy A, Rouleau D, Lalonde R, Beauvais C, de Castro C, Coutlée F., for the Human Immunodeficiency and Papilloma Virus Research Group (HIPVIRG) Study Group. Argon plasma coagulation treatment of anal high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions in men who have sex with men living with HIV: results of a 2-year prospective pilot study. HIV medicine; 19 (2): 81-89; 2018.

11. Pagé M G, Fortier M, Ware MA, Choinière M. As if one pain problem was not enough: prevalence and patterns of coexisting chronic pain conditions and their impact on treatment outcomes. Journal of pain research; volume 11: 237-254; 2018.

12. Pluye P, Loignon C, Lagarde F, Doray G, El Sherif R, Granikov V, Gonzalez Reyes A, Bujold M, Grad R, Bartlett G, Barwick M, Schuster T, Turcotte E, Bouthillier F. Assessing and Improving the Use of Online Information About Child Development, Education, Health, and Well-Being in Low-Education, Low-Income Parents: Protocol for a Mixed-Methods Multiphase Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR) Research Protocols; 7 (11): e186; 2018.

13. de Jesús García A, Paredes-Solís S, Geovani Gil V, Serrano-de los Santos R, Sánchez-Gervacio BM, Ledogar RJ, Andersson N, Cockcroft A. Associations with perineal trauma during childbirth at home and in health facilities in indigenous municipalities in southern Mexico: a cross-sectional cluster survey. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth; volume 18: 198; 2018.

14. Kerkerian G, Kestler M, Carter A, Wang L, Kronfli N, Sereda Paul, Roth E, Milloy M-J, Pick N, Money D, Webster K, Hogg R S, de Pokomandy A, Loutfy M, Kaida A. Attrition across the HIV cascade of care among a diverse cohort of women living with HIV in Canada. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes (JAIDS); 79 (2): 226-236; 2018.

15. Lussier MT, Diallo FB, Pluye P, Grad R, Lessard A, Rhéaume C, Labrecque M. Availability and use of drug samples in the Province of Quebec, Canada (Part 3 of 3). Canadian Family Physician; 64 (12): e546-e552; 2018.

16. Engler K, Lènàrt A, Lessard D, Toupin I, Lebouché B. Barriers to antiretroviral therapy adherence in developed countries: a qualitative synthesis to develop a conceptual framework for a new patient-reported outcome measure. AIDS Care; volume 30: 1-12; December 14, 2018; 2018.

17. Ripley S, Robinson E, Johnson-Down L, Andermann A, Ayotte P, Lucas M, Nieboer E. Blood and Hair Mercury Concentrations among Cree First Nations of Eeyou Istchee (Quebec, Canada): time trends, prenatal exposure and links to local fish consumption. International Journal of Circumpolar Health 2018; 2018 (77): 1-9; 2018.

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18. Mahjour I, Mahjoub MA, Rekik I, Weiner M, Aisen P, Petersen R, Jack C, Jagust W, Trojanowki J, Toga A, Beckett L, Green R,Saykin A, Morris J, Shaw L, Kaye J, Wuinn J, Silbert L, Lind B, Carter R, Dolen S, Schneider L, Pawluczyk S, Beccera M, Teodoro L, Sp. Brain multiplexes reveal morphological connectional biomarkers fngerprinting late brain dementia states. Scientific Reports; 8 (1): Article number 4103; 2018.

19. Tan DHS, Hull MW, Yoong D, Tremblay C, O'Byrne P, Thomas R, Kille J, Baril JG, Cox J, Giguere P, Harris M, Hughes C, MacPherson P, O'Donnell S, Reimer J, Singh A, Barrett L, Bogoch I, Jollimore J, Lambert G, Lebouche B, Metz G, Rogers T, Shafran S, Biom. Canadian guideline on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis and nonoccupational post-exposure prophylaxis. CMAJ; 27 (189): E1448-E1458; 2018.

20. Malla A, Iyer S, Shah J, Joober R, Boksa P, Lal S, Fuhrer R, Andersson N, Abdel-Baki A, Hutt-MacLeod D, Beaton A, Reaume-Zimmer, Chisholm-Nelson J, Roussea C, Chandrasena R, Bourque J, Aubin D, Levasseur MA, Windelmann I, Etter M, Kelland J, Tait C, Torri. Canadian Response to Need for Transformation of Youth Mental Health Services. Early Intervention in Psychiatry; December 16, 2018; 2018.

21. Hudon C, Chouinard MC, Aubrey-Bassler K, Burge F, Ramsden V, Brodeur M, Bush P, Couturier Y, Dubois M-F, Guenette , Legare F, Morin P, Poder T, Poitras M-E, Roberge P, Bighead S, Campbell C, Davis B, Deschesnes E, Gander S, Gauthier G, Gauthier P, Gibson. Case management in primary care for frequent users of healthcare services with chronic diseases and complex care needs: an implementation and realist evaluation protocol. BMJ Open; 8 (11): e02643; 2018.

22. Dickinson JA, Bell NR, Grad RM, Singh H. Choosing guidelines to use in your practice. Canadian Family Physician; 2018 (64): 357-362; 2018.

23. Charbonneau A, Charette LP, Rouleau G, Savary M, Wilson A, Heer E, Bériault K, De Pokomandy A. Clinical presentation of Lyme disease in the higher-risk region of Quebec: a retrospective descriptive study. CMAJ open; 6 (1): E139-E145; 2018.

24. Misra S, Doucet A, Morales J, Andersson N, Macaulay A, Evans A. Community engagement in global health education supports equity and advances local priorities: an eight-year Ecuador-Canadapartnership. Canadian Medical Education Journal; 9 (2): 46-51; 2018.

25. Walrod J, Seccareccia E, Sarmiento I, Pimentel J, Misra S, Morales J, Doucet A, Andersson N. Community factors associated with stunting, overweight and food insecurity: a community-based mixed-method study in four Andean indigenous communities in Ecuador. BMJ Open; 8 (e020760): 1-11; 2018.

26. Rodriguez C, Bélanger E, Nugus P, Boillat M, Dove M, Steinert Y, Lalla L. Community preceptors’ motivations and views about their relationships with medical students during alongitudinal family medicine experience: A qualitative case study. Teaching & Learning in Medicine; 31 (2): 119-128; 2018.

27. Willoughby K, Rodriguez C, Boillat M, Dove M, Nugus P, Steinert Y, Lalla L. Comparing Medical Students' and Preceptors' Views of a Longitudinal Pre-Clerkship Family medicine Course. PRiMER; 2 (7): 2018.

28. Maastrup R, Haiek LN, the Neo‐BFHI Survey Group. Compliance with the “Baby‐friendly Hospital Initiative for Neonatal Wards” in 36 countries. Maternal and Child Nutrition; 15 (2): e12690; 2018.

29. Bujold M, Granikov V, El Sherif R, Pluye P. Crowdsourcing a mixed systematic review on a complex topic and a heterogeneous population: Lessons learned. Education for Information (Special Issue); 34 (4): 293-300; 2018.

30. Sourial N, Longo C, Vedel I, Schuster T. Daring to draw causal claims from non-randomized studies of primary care interventions. Family Practice; 35 (5): 639–643; 2018.

31. Bujold M, Pluye P, Légaré F, Haggerty J, Gore G, El Sherif R, Poitras ME, Beaulieu MC, Beaulieu MD, Bush P, Couturier Y, Débarges B, Gagnon J, Giguère A, Grad R, Granikov V, Goulet S, Hudon C, Kremer B, Kröger E, Kudrina I, Lebouché B, Loignon C, Lussier. Decisional needs assessment of patients with complex care needs in primary care: a participatory systematic mixed studies review protocol. BMJ Open; 7 (11): e016400; 2018.

32. Toupin I, Engler K, Lebouché B, Otis J, Lévy JJ, Fernet M. Decision-making about motherhood among women living with HIV in Canada: a negotiation of multidimentional risks. Culture, Health and Sexuality; Published online: 432-446; 2018.

33. Bartlett G, Longo C, Puzhko S, Gagnon J, Rahimzadeh V. Deliberative Stakeholder Consultations: Creating Insights into Effective Practice-Change in Family Medicine. Family Practice; 35 (6): 749-752; 2018.

34. Kurkurina E, Lange BCL, Lama SD, Burk-Leaver E, Yaffe MJ, Monin JK, Humphries D. Detection of elder abuse: Exploring the potential use of the Elder Abuse Suspicion Index © by law enforcement officers in the field. Journal of Elder Abuse and Neglect; 30 (2): 103-126; 2018.

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35. Toupin I, Engler K, Lessard D, Wong L, Lènàrt A, Spire B, Rafii F, Lebouché B. Developing a patient-reported outcome measure for HIV care on perceived barriers to antiretroviral adherence: assessing the needs of HIV clinicians through qualitative analysis. Quality of Life Research; 27 (2): 379-388; 2018.

36. Burger E, Dyer MA, Sy S, Palefsky JM, De Pokimandy A, Coutlee F, Silverberg M, Kim JJ. Development and calibration of a mathematical model of anal carcinogenesis for high-risk HIV-infected men. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes; 79 (1): 10-19; 2018.

37. Benedetti A, Wu Y, Levis B, Wilchesky M, Boruff J, Patten S, Cuijpers P, Shrier I, Gilbody S, Ismail Z, McMillan D, Mitchell N, Ziegelstein R, Thombs B. Diagnostic Accuracy of the Geriatric Depression Scale-30, Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS)-15, GDS-5, and GDS-4 for Detecting Major Depression: Protocol for a Systematic Review and Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis. BMJ Open; 8 (12): e026598; 2018.

38. Langlois A, Nie JY, Thomas J, Hong QN, Pluye P. Discriminating Between Empirical Studies and Nonempirical Works Using Automated Text Classification. Research Synthesis Methods; 9 (4): 587-601; 2018.

39. Galvao MCB, Carmon F, Grad R, Pluye P, Ricarte ILM. Disseminating health evidence summaries to increase evidence use in health care. Revista De Saúde Pública; volume 52: e57; 2018.

40. Verhagen E, Van Dyk, Clark N, Shrier I. Do not throw the baby out with the bathwater; Screening can identify meaningful risk factors for sports injuries. British Journal of Sports Medicine; 52 (19): 1223-1224; 2018.

41. Rhéaume C, Labrecque M, Moisan N, […] Grad RM, Pluye P. Drug samples in family medicine teaching units: a cross-sectional descriptive study. Part 1: drug sample management policies and the relationship between the pharmaceutical industry and residents in Quebec. Canadian Family Physician; 2018 (64): e531-e539; 2018.

42. Lessard A, Lussier M-T, Diallo FB, […], Grad RM. Drug samples in family medicine teaching units: a cross-sectional descriptive study. Part 2: portrait of drug sample management in Quebec. Canadian Family Physician; 2018 (64): e540-e545; 2018.

43. Lussier M-T, Diallo FB, Pluye P, Grad RM et al. Drug samples in family medicine teaching units: a cross-sectional descriptive study. Part 3: availability and use of drug samples in Quebec.. Canadian Family Physician; 2018 (64): e546-e552; 2018.

44. Bujold M, El Sherif R, Johnson-Lafleur J, Doray G, Pluye P. Ecological content validation of the Information Assessment Method for parents (IAM-parent): A mixed methods study. Evaluation and Program Planning (EPP); 66: 79-88; 2018.

45. Haim Abenhaim, Togas Tulandi , Machelle Wilchesky , Robert Platt , Andrea Spence , Nicholas Czuzoj-Shulman , Samy Suissa. Effect of Cesarean Delivery on Long-Term Risk of Small Bowel Obstruction. British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology; 131 (2): 354-359; 2018.

46. Abenhainm HA, Tulandi T, Wilchesky M, Platt R, Spence AR, Czuzoj-Shulman N, Suissa S. Effect of cesarean delivery on long-term risk of small bowel obstruction. Obstetrics and Gynecology; 131 (2): 354-359; 2018.

47. Abdalla SJ, Smith BM, Ware MA, Moore M. Li PZ, Bourbeau J, Jensen D. Effect of Vaporized Cannabis on Exertional Breathlessness and Exercise Endurance in Advanced COPD: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Annals of the American Thoracic Society; 15 (10): 1146-1158; 2018.

48. Magnan S, Tota JE, El-Zein M, Burchell AN, Schiller JT, Ferenczy A, Tellier PP, Coutlée F, Franco EL, Rodrigues A, Morykon N, Rodrigues R, Bouten S, Shapiro S, Guénoun J, Slavetchva N. Efficacy of a Carrageenan gel Against Transmission of Cervical HPV (CATCH): interim analysis of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 2B trial. Clinical Microbiology and Infection; 2018.

49. McCusker J, Vu T.T.M, Veillette N, Cossette S, Vadeboncoeur A, Ciampi A, Cetin-Sahin D, Belzile E. Elder-friendly Emergency Department: Development and Validation of an Assessment Tool. Journal of American Geriatric Society; 66 (2): 394-400; 2018.

50. Lang E, Bell N, Dickinson J, Grad RM et al.. Eliciting patient values and preferences to inform shared decision making in preventive screening. Canadian Family Physician; 2018 (64): 28-31; 2018.

51. Abdollahpour I, Nedjat S, Mansournia MA, Schuster T. Estimation of the marginal effect of regular drug use on multiple sclerosis in the Iranian population. PloS one; 13 (4): e0196244; 2018.

52. Rahimzadeh V. Ethics Governance Outside the Box: Reimagining Blockchainas a Policy Tool to Facilitate Single Ethics Review and DataSharing for the 'omics' Sciences. Blockchain in Healthcare Today; 1 (1): 1-10; 2018.

53. Khayyat Kholghi, Maedeh, Bartlett G, Phillips M, Salsberg J, McComber A, Macaulay AC. Evaluating an Indigenous Health Education Program for Diabetes Prevention: using lessons learned through Community Talking Circles. Family Practice; 35 (1): 80-87; 0.

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54. Sarmiento I, S Paredes-Solis, N Andersson. Evaluating an Intercultural Dialogue Intervention to Strengthen Traditional IndigenousMidwifery in the South of Mexico. International Journal of Qualitative Methods; 17 (1): 27-28; 2018.

55. Thomas P, Sachar A, While A, Brophy C, Manning C, Mills C, Ruprah-Shah B, Millington-Sanders C, Morris D, Kelley Patterson D, Hill D, Ougrin D, Collins D, Wright F, Shaw F, Vedel I, Guttery J, Spicer J, Lang L, Wewiora L, Gul M, Rainsford M, Sims M, K. Evaluating case studies of community-oriented integrated care. London Journal of Primary Care; 10 (4): 73-81; 2018.

56. Lessard D*, Engler K, Toupin I, Team I-SC, Routy JP, Lebouché B. Evaluation of a project to engage patients in the development of a patient‐reported measure for HIV care (the I-Score Study). Health Expectations; 22 (2): 209-225; 2018.

57. Khayyat Kholghi M, Bartlett G, Phillips M, Salsberg J, McComber AM, Macaulay AC. Evaluation of an Indigenous Health Curriculum for Diabetes Prevention: Engaging with Community. Family Practice; 35 (1): 80-87; 2018.

58. Terry AL, Burge F, Martin-Misener R, Marshall E, Dolovic L, Valaitis R, Haggerty J, Wong S, Farrales L, et al.. Evolution & 15 Year Impact of a Pan-Canadian Training Program: Transdisciplinary Understanding & Training on Research - Primary Health Care. Canadian Family Physician; 64 (6): 475-476; 2018.

59. Logie C, Want Y, Marcus N, Kaida A, O’Brien N, Webster K, Conway T, de Pokomandy A, Loutfy M, CHIWOS Research Team.. Factors Associated with the Separate and Concurrent Experiences of Food and Housing Insecurity Among Women Living with HIV in Canada. AIDS and Behavior; 22 (9): 3100-3110; 2018.

60. Wieder H , Beer AJ , Siveke J , Schuster T , Buck AK , Herrmann K , Stollfuss JC. F-fluorothymidine PET for predicting survival in patients with resectable pancreatic cancer. Oncotarget; 9 (11): 10128-10134; 2018.

61. Godard-Sebillotte C, Pelletier E, Rochette L, Vedel I. Fiche Indicateur: Proportion d’hospitalisations des personnes de 65 ans et plus atteintes de la maladie d’Alzheimer et des autres troubles neurocognitifs majeurs Système intégré de surveillance des maladies chroniques du Québec (SISMACQ). Institut national de santé publique du Québec (INSPQ); 2018.

62. Shrier I, Piché A, Steele RJ. First concussion did not increase the risk of subsequent concussion when patients were managed appropriately. British Journal of Sports Medicine; 53 (7): 389-390; 2018.

63. Srinivasan A, Al Khoury A, Puzhko S, Dobrich C, Stern M, Mitnick H, Goldfarb. Frenotomy in Infants with Tongue-Tie and Breastfeeding Problems. Journal of Human Lactation; 2018.

64. Jaworsky Denise, Logie Carmen H, Wagner Anne C, Conway Tracey, Kaida Angela, de Pokomandy Alexandra, Webster Kath, Proulx-Boucher Karène, Sereda Paul, Loutfy Mona. Geographic differences in the experiences of HIV-related stigma for women living with HIV in northern and rural communities of Ontario, Canada. Rural and remote health; 18 (3): 4522; 2018.

65. Dion A, Joseph L, Jimenez V, Gutierrez A, Benameur A, Robert E, Andersson N. Grounding evidence in experience to support people-centered health services. International Journal of Public Health; 2018.

66. Loutfi D, Law S, McCutcheon C, Carlin R, Torrie J, Macdonald ME. Health planning for Indigenous populations: A rapid evidence review. International Indigenous Policy Journal; 9 (1): 2018.

67. O'Brien N, Hong QN, Law S, Massoud S, Carter A, Kaida A, Loutfy M, Cox J, Andersson N, DE POKOMANDY A. Health System Features That Enhance Access to Comprehensive Primary Care for Women Living with HIV in High-Income Settings: A Systematic Mixed Studies Review. AIDS patient care and STDs; 32 (4): 129-148; 2018.

68. O’Brien N, Hong QN, Law S, Massoud S, Carter A, Kaida A, Loutfy M, Cox J, Andersson N, de Pokomandy A.. Health System Features That Enhance Access to Comprehensive Primary Care for WomenLiving with HIV in High-Income Settings: A Systematic Mixed Studies Review. AIDS Patient Care and STDs; 17 (1): 24; 2018.

69. Contandriopoulos D, Brousselle A, Larouche C, Breton M, Rivard M, Beaulieu MD, Haggerty J, et al.. Healthcare reforms, inertia polarization and group influence. Health Policy; 122 (9): 1018-1027; 2018.

70. Carter A, Loutfy M, DE POKOMANDY A, Colley G, Zhang W, Sereda P, *O'Brien N, Proulx-Boucher K, Nicholson V, Beaver K, Kaida A; CHIWOS Research Team. Health-related quality-of-life and receipt of women-centered HIV care among women living with HIV in Canada. Women & health; 58 (5): 498-518; 2018.

71. Wagner Anne C, Jaworsky Denise, Logie Carmen H, Conway Tracey, Pick Neora, Wozniak Denise, Rana Jesleen, Tharao Wangari, Kaida Angela, de Pokomandy Alexandra, Ion Allyson, Chambers Lori A, Webster Kath, MacGillivray S Jay, Loutfy Mona. High rates of post-traumatic stress symptoms in women living with HIV in Canada. PloS one; 13 (7): e0200526; 2018.

72. Lessard D, Toupin I, Engler K, Lènàrt A, I-Score Consulting Team, Lebouché B.. HIV-Positive Patients' Perceptions of Antiretroviral Therapy Adherence in Relation to Subjective Time: Imprinting, Domino Effects, and Future Shadowing. Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care; Volume 17 (January-December 2018); 2018.

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73. Kiani Z, Dupuy FP, Bruneau J, Lebouché B, Zhang CX, Jackson E, Lisovsky I, da Fonseca S, Geraghty DE, Bernard NF. HLA-F on HLA-Null 721.221 Cells Activates Primary NK Cells Expressing the Activating Killer Ig-like Receptor KIR3DS1. Journal of Immunology; 201 (1): 113-123; 2018.

74. McCusker J, Cetin-Sahin D, Cossette S, Ducharme F, Vadeboncoeur A, Vu TTM, Veillette N, Ciampi A, Belzile E, Berthelot S, Lachance PA, Mah R. How Older Adults Experience an Emergency Department Visit: Development and Validation of Measures. Annals of Emergency Medicine; 71 (6): 755-766; 2018.

75. Loutfi, David, Lévesque, Jean-Frédéric, Mukherjee, Subrata. Impact of the Elderly on Household Health Expenditure in Bihar and Kerala, India. Journal of Health Management; 20 (1): 1-14; 2018.

76. Cockcroft A, Omer K, Gidado Y, Gamawa AI, Andersson N. Impact of universal home visits on maternal and infant outcomes in Bauchi State, Nigeria: protocol of a cluster randomized controlled trial. BMC Health Services Research; 18 (1): Article number 510; 2018.

77. Haskell L , Tavender EJ , Wilson C , O'Brien S , Babl FE , Borland ML , Cotterell L , Schuster T , Orsini F , Sheridan N , Johnson D , Oakley E , Dalziel SR , PREDICT. Implementing evidence-based practices in the care of infants with bronchiolitis in Australasian acute care settings: study protocol for a cluster randomised controlled study.. BMC Pediatrics; 18 (1): 218; 2018.

78. Hong QN, Gonzalez-Reyes A, Pluye P. Improving the usefulness of a tool for appraising the quality of qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods studies, the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT). Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice; 24 (3): 459-467; 2018.

79. Nhan C, Nguyen L, Nugus P, Fisher R, Azzam M, Young M. Interdisciplinary Crisis Resource Management Training: How Do Otolaryngology Residents Compare? A Survey Study. Otolaryngology; 2 (2); 2018.

80. Albina A, Archer A, Boivin M, Cranmer H, Johnson K, Krishnaraj, Maneshi A, Oddy L, Redwood-Campbell L, Russell R. International Emergency Medical Teams Training Workshop Special Report. Prehosp Disast Med; 33 (3): 335-338; 2018.

81. Kronfli N, Linthwaite B, Kouyoumdjian F, Klein MB, Lebouché B, Sebastiani G, Cox J. Interventions to increase testing, linkage to care and treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection among people in prisons: A systematic review. International Journal of Drug Policy; 28 (57): 95-103; 2018.

82. Rahimzadeh V , Schickhardt C, Knoppers BM, Sénécal K, Vears DF, Fernandez CV, Pfister S, Plon S, Terry S, Williams J, Williams MS, Cornel M, Friedman JM.. Key Implications of Data Sharing in Pediatric Genomics. JAMA Pediatrics; epublished first March 19, 2018; 2018.

83. Staudt MD, Clark AJ, Gordon AS, Lynch ME, Morley-Forster PK, Nathan H, Smyth C, Stitt LW, Toth C, Ware MA, Moulin DE. Long-Term Outcomes in the Management of Central Neuropathic Pain Syndromes: A Prospective Observational Cohort Study. Can J Nerol Sci; issue 12: 1-8; 2018.

84. Alexander PMA , Nugent AW , Daubeney PEF , Lee KJ , Sleeper LA , Schuster T , Turner C , Davis AM , Semsarian C , Colan SD , Robertson T , Ramsay J , Justo R , Sholler GF , King I , Weintraub RG, National Australian Childhood Cardiomyopathy Study. Long-Term Outcomes of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Diagnosed During Childhood: Results from a National Population-Based Study. Circulation; 2018.

85. Karunananthan S, Bergman H. Managing frailty in primary care: evidence gaps cannot be ignored. CMAJ; 190 (38): E1122-E1123; 2018.

86. Ware Mark A. Medical Cannabis Research: Issues and Priorities. Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology; 43 (1): 214-215; 2018.

87. Curess R, Cruess S, Steinert Y. Medicine as a community of practice: Implications for medical education. Academic Medicine; 93 (2): 185-191; 2018.

88. Sandhu, H, Arora, A, Brasch, J, Streiner, D. Mental Health Stigma: Explicit and Implicit Attitudes of Canadian Undergraduate Students, Medical School Students, Psychiatry Residents, and Psychiatrists. The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry; July 29, 2018: 1-23; 2018.

89. Queiroga Souto R, Pereira Linhares FM, de Melo Canêjo MI, Vieira Tourinho FS, Cavalcanti Cordeiro R, & Pluye P [last/senior author]. Metodologias de ensino-aprendizagem sob a perspectiva de discentes de enfermagem [Teaching-learning methodologies from the perspective of nursing students]. Revista Rene [Brazil]; volume 19: e3408; 2018.

90. Heck MM , Retz M , Bandur M , Souchay M , Vitzthum E , Weirich G , Schuster T , Autenrieth M , Kübler H , Maurer T , Thalgott M , Herkommer K , Gschwend JE , Nawroth R. Molecular lymph node status for prognostic stratification of prostate cancer patients undergoing radical prostatectomy with extended pelvic lymph node dissection. Clinical cancer research : an official journal of the American Association for Cancer Research; 24 (10): 2342-2349; 2018.

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91. Costiniuk CT, Mehraj V, Routy JP, de Castro C, Wasef N, Jenabian MA, Salahuddin S, Lebouché B, Cox J, Szabo J, Klein M, Lands L, Shapiro AJ. Nasal Nitric Oxide Levels in HIV Infection: A Cross-Sectional Study. AIDS Research and Treatment; 2018: article number 7645125; 2018.

92. Nugus P, Ranmuthugala G, Greenfield D, Travaglia J, Kolne K, Lamothe J. New ways to get policy into practice: A mixed-method participatory study of care coordination and street-level bureaucrats. Journal of Health Organization & Management; 32 (6): 809-824; 2018.

93. Granados Moreno P, Ali-Khan SE, Capps B, Caulfield T, Chalaude D, Edwards E. A, Gold ER, Rahimzadeh V, Thorogood A, Auld D, Bertier G, Breden F, Caron R, César P MDG, Cook-Deegan R, Doerr M, Duncan R, Issa AM, Reichman J, Simard J, So D, Vanamala Sandeep, Joly Y. Open science precision medicine in Canada: Points to consider. Facets; volume 4: 1-19; 2018.

94. Pluye P, El Sherif R, Granikov V, Barbosa Galvao MC, Hong QN, Vedel I, Frati F, Desroches S, Repchinsky C, Rihoux B, Légaré F, Burnand B, Bujold M, & Grad RM. Outcomes of Online Consumer Health Information: A systematic mixed studies review with framework synthesis. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology (JASIST): pages 1-17; 2018.

95. Mbuagbaw L, Slogrove A, Sas J, Kunda J, Morfaw F, Mukonzo J, Cao W, Ngomba-Kadima G, Zunza M, Ongolo-Zogo P, Nana P, Cockcroft A, Andersson N, Sewankambo N, Cotton M, Li T, Young T, Singer J, Routy J-P, Ross C, Thin K, Thabane L, Anis AH. Output from the CIHR Canadian HIV Trials Network (the CTN) International Postdoctoral Fellowship for capacity building in HIV clinical trials. HIV/AIDS - Research and Palliative Care; volume 10: 1-5; 2018.

96. Singh H, Dickinson J, Thériault G, Grad RM et al. Overdiagnosis: Causes and Consequences in Primary Health Care. Canadian Family Physician; 64 (9): 654-659; 2018.

97. Andersson, Neil. Participatory research – a modernising science for primary health care. Journal of General and Family Medicine; 19 (5): 154-159; 2018.

98. Logie CH, Lacombe-Duncan A, Wang Y, Kaida A, Conway T, Webster K, De Pokomandy A, Loutfy MR, et al. Pathways From HIV-Related Stigma to Antiretroviral Therapy Measures in the HIV Care Cascade for Women Living With HIV in Canada. Journal of acquired immune deficiency syndromes; 77 (2): 144-153; 2018.

99. Boivin A, L'Esperance A, Gauvin F-P, Dumez V, Macaulay AC, Lehoux P, Abelson J. Patient and Public Engagement in Research and Health System Decision-making: A Systematic Review of Evaluation Tools. Health Expectations; 21 (6) December 2018: 1075-1084; 2018.

100. Toupin I, Engler K, Lessard D, Wong L, Lènàrt A, Raffi F, Spire B and Lebouché B. Patient profiles as organizing HIV clinicians’ ART adherence management: A qualitative analysis. AIDS Care; 30 (2): 207-210; 2018.

101. Gagné AJ, Voyer P, Boucher V, Nadeau A, Carmichael PH, Pelletier M, Gouin É, Berthelot S, Daoust R, Wilchesky M, Richard H, Pelletier I, Balllard S, Laguë A, Émond M. Performance of the French version of the 4AT for screening the elderly for delirium in the emergency department. Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine; 20 (6): 903-910; 2018.

102. Selby K, Bartlett G, Cornuz J. Personalized cancer screening: helping primary care rise to the challenge. Public Health Reviews; 39 (4): 1-8; 2018.

103. McCusker J, Yaffe M, Faria R, Lambert S, Li M, Poirier-Bisson J, Magalhaes M, de Raad M. Phase II trial of a depression self-care intervention for adult cancer survivors. European Journal of Cancer Care; volume 27: e12763; 2018.

104. Girgis L, Van Gurp G, Zakus D, Andermann A. Physician experiences and barriers to addressing the social determinants of health in the Eastern Mediterranean Region: A Qualitative research Study. BMC Health Services research; 2018 (18): 614-621; 2018.

105. McCusker J, Lambert S, Yaffe M, Cole M, Hidalgo M, Amir E, de Raad M, Belzile E.. Pilot study of a transitional intervention for family care of older adults.. Canadian Journal on Aging; Epub ahead of print: pages 1-12; 2018.

106. Absmaier M , Napieralski R , Schuster T , Aubele M , Walch A , Magdolen V , Dorn J , Gross E , Harbeck N , Noske A , Kiechle M , Schmitt M. PITX2 DNA-methylation predicts response to anthracycline-based adjuvant chemotherapy in triple-negative breast cancer patients.. International journal of oncology; 52 (3): 755-767; 2018.

107. Rhéaume C, Labrecque M, Moisan N, Rioux J, Tardieux E, Diallo FB, Lussier MT, Lessard A, Grad R, & Pluye P [last/senior author]. Policies regarding drug sample management and relationship between the pharmaceutical industry and residents in Quebec (Part 1 of 3). Canadian Family Physician; 64 (12): e531-e539; 2018.

108. Lessard A, Lussier MT, Diallo FB, Labrecque M, Rhéaume C, Pluye P, & Grad R. Portrait of drug sample management in Quebec (Part 2 of 3). Canadian Family Physician; 64 (12): e540-e545; 2018.

109. Wilson B, Bell N, Grad RM, Thériault G, Dickinson JA. Practice Organization for Preventive Screening. Canadian Family Physician; 64 (11): 816-820; 2018.

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110. Van der Wal R, Loutfi D. Pre-exposure prophylaxis for HIV prevention in East and Southern Africa. Canadian Journal of Public Health; volume 108: 5-6; 2018.

111. Haggerty J, Chin M, Katz A, Young K, Foley J, Groulx A, Pérez-Stable E, Turnbull J, DeVoe J, Uchendo U.. Proactive Strategies to Address Health Equity and Disparities: Recommendations from a Bi-National symposium. The Journal of the American board of Family Medicine; 31 (3): 479-483; 2018.

112. Wong S, Langton JM, Katz A, Fortin M, Godwin M, Green M, Grunfeld E, Hassani K, Kendall C, Liddy C, Ploeg J, Wodchis WP, Haggerty JL. Promoting cross-jurisdictional primary health care research: developing a set of common indicators across 12 community-based primary health care teams in Canada. Primary Health Care Resesarch & Development; epub: pages 1-7; 2018.

113. Godard-Sebillotte C, Hacker Teper M, Vedel I. Quebec doctors’ pay rise should be evidence based and transparent. [invited letter]. British Medical Journal; volume 362: k3148; 2018.

114. Zhang H , Schuster T. Questionnaire instrument development in primary health care research: A plea for the use of Bayesian inference. Canadian family physician Medecin de famille canadien; 64 (9): 699-700; 2018.

115. Godard-Sebillotte C, Hacker Teper M, Vedel I.. Re: Quebec doctors reject pay rise in favour ofinvestment in health system. Quebec doctors reject pay rise in favour ofinvestment in health system. BMJ; 2018 (360): k1160; 2018.

116. Gonzalez Reyez A, Karunananthan S, Godard-Sebillotte C, Hacker Teper M, Pluye P. Re: Rethinking assumptions about delivery of healthcare: implications for universal health coverage. BMJ; 2018 (361): K1716; 2018.

117. FitzGerald JM, Lemiere C, Lougheed MD, Ducharme FM, Dell SD, Ramsey C, [...] Grad RM. Recognition and management of severe asthma: A Canadian Thoracic Society position statement. Canadian Journal of Respiratory, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine; 1 (4): 199-221; 2018.

118. Moore A, Doull M, Grad RM et al. Recommendations on screening for asymptomatic bacteriuria in pregnancy. CMAJ; issue 190: E823-E830; 2018.

119. Sherif RE, Pluye P, Thoër C, Rodriguez C. Reducing Negative Outcomes of Online Consumer Health Information: Qualitative Interpretive Study with Clinicians, Librarians, and Consumers. Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR); 20 (5): Article number e169; 2018.

120. Gabrielle Pagé, Irina Kudrina, Hervé Tchala Vignon Zomahoun, Daniela Ziegler, Pierre Beaulieu, Céline Charbonneau, Jennifer Cogan, Raoul Daoust, Marc O. Martel, Andrée Néron, Philippe Richebé and Hance Clarke. Relative frequency and risk factors for long-term opioid therapy following surgery and trauma among adults: a systematic review protocol. Systematic Review 2018; July 18, 2018; 7 (1): 97; 2018.

121. Gillian Bartlett, Cristina Longo, Svetlana Puzhko, Justin Gagnon and Vasiliki Rahimzadeh. Removing Researcher Bias for Evidence Implementation in Family Medicine. Family Practice; 35 (6): 749-752; 2018.

122. Sarmiento I, Paredes-Solis S, Andersson N, Cockcroft A. Safe Birth and Cultural Safety in southern Mexico: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial. Trials; 19 (1): 1-15; 2018.

123. Sarmiento I, Paredes-Solis S, Andersson N, Cockcroft A. Safe motherhood in cultural safety – intercultural dialogue in support of indigenous midwifery in southern Mexico: protocol of a pragmatic cluster-randomised controlled trial. Trials; volume 19: 354; 2018.

124. Sarmiento I, Paredes-Solis S, Andersson N. Safe motherhood in cultural safety - intercultural dialogue in support of indigenousmidwifery in southern Mexico: pragmatic cluster-randomised controlled trial. Trials; 19 (1): 354; 2018.

125. Dickinson JA, Pimlott N, Grad RM et al. Screening – When Things Go Wrong. Canadian Family Physician; 64 (7): 502-508; 2018.

126. Benmassaoud A, Ghali P, Cox J, Wong P, Szabo J, Deschenes M, Osikowicz M, Lebouché B, Klein MB, Sebastiani G. Screening for non alcoholic steatohepatitis by using cytokeratin 18 and transient elastography in HIV mono-infection. PLoS One; 30 (13): E0191985; 2018.

127. Andermann, Anne. Screening for social determinants of health in clinical care: Moving from the margins to the mainstream. Publich health Reviews 2018; 2018 (39): 19-38; 2018.

128. Dickinson JA, Pimlott N, Grad R, Singh H, Szafran O, Wilson BJ, Groulx S, Thériault G, Bell NR. Screening: When things go wrong [Dépistage: quand les choses tournent mal]. Canadian Family Physician; 64 (7): 502-508; 2018.

129. Siedlikowski S, Ells C, Bartlett C. Scrutinizing screening: A critical interpretive review of primary care provider perspectives on mammography decisionmaking with average-risk women. Public Health Reviews; 39 (1): Article number 15; 2018.

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130. Harris, Janet L, Cook T, Gibbs L, Oetzel J, Salsberg J, Shinn C, Springett J, Wallerstein N, Wright M. Searching for the Impact of Participation in Health and Health Research: Challenges and Methods. Biomed Research International; volume 2018 (12); 2018.

131. Oliveira Maureen, Ibanescu Ruxandra-Ilinca, Anstett Kaitlin, Mésplède Thibault, Routy Jean-Pierre, Robbins Marjorie A, Brenner Bluma G, and the Montreal Primary HIV (PHI) Cohort Study Group. Selective resistance profiles emerging in patient-derived clinical isolates with cabotegravir, bictegravir, dolutegravir, and elvitegravir. Retrovirology; 15 (1): 56; 2018.

132. McCusker J, Lambert SD, Haggerty J, Yaffe M, Belzlile E, Ciampi A.. Self-management support in primary care is associated with improvement in patient activation. Patient Education and Counseling; Epub ahead of print: 1-7; 2018.

133. Godaert L, Godard-Sebillotte C, Allard Saint-Albin L, Bousquet L, Bourdel-Marchasson I, Fanon JL, Dramé M. Self-Rated Health as a Predictor of Mid-term and Long-term Mortality in older Afro-Caribbeans Hospitalised via the Emergency Department. Quality of Life Research; 27 (1): 91-96; 2018.

134. VanDenKerkhof EG, Stitt L, Clark AJ, Gordon A, Lynch M, Morley-Forster PK, Nathan HJ, Smyth C, Toth C, Ware MA, Moulin DE. Sensitivity of the DN4 in Screening for Neuropathic Pain Syndromes. Clin J Pain.; 34 (1): 30-36; 2018.

135. Logie Carmen H, Lacombe-Duncan Ashley, Wang Ying, Kaida Angela, de Pokomandy Alexandra, Webster Kath, Conway Tracey, Loutfy Mona. Sexual Orientation Differences in Health and Wellbeing Among Women Living with HIV in Canada: Findings from a National Cohort Study. AIDS and Behavior; 22 (6): 1987-2001; 2018.

136. Granikov V & Pluye P [guest editors' non-peer-reviewed-preface]. Sharing Insights from Health Information Research: Part 1 [non-peer-reviewed preface to our special issue]. Education for Information; 34 (4): 255-259; 2018.

137. Vedel I, LeBerre M, Sourial N, Arsenault-Lapierre G, Bergman H, Lapointe L. Shedding Light on Conditions for the Successful Diffusion of Recommendations in Primary Care: A Mixed Methods Study. Implementation science; 13 (129): 1-12; 2018.

138. Haggerty J, Fortin M, Breton M. Snapshot of a Primary Care Waiting Room: Informing Priorities for Practice Redesign to the Patient's Medical Home. Canadian Family Physician; 64 (9): e407-e413; 2018.

139. Mehraj Vikram, Cox Joseph, Lebouché Bertrand, Costiniuk Cecilia, Cao Wei, Li Taisheng, Ponte Rosalie, Thomas Réjean, Szabo Jason, Baril Jean-Guy, Trottier Benoit, Côté Pierre, LeBlanc Roger, Bruneau Julie, Tremblay Cécile, Routy Jean-Pierre. Socio-economic status and time trends associated with early ART initiation following primary HIV infection in Montreal, Canada: 1996 to 2015. Journal of the International AIDS Society; 21 (2); 2018.

140. Webster K, Carter A, Proulx-Boucher K, Dubuc D, Nicholson V, Beaver K, Gasingirwa C, Ménard B, O'Brien N, Mitchell K, Bajard MP, Ding E, DE POKOMANDY A, Loutfy M, Kaida A. Strategies for Recruiting Women Living with Human Immunodeficiency Virus in Community-Based Research: Lessons from Canada. Progress in community health partnerships: research, education, and action; 12 (1): 21-34; 2018.

141. Shokoohi Mostafa, Bauer Greta R, Kaida Angela, Lacombe-Duncan Ashley, Kazemi Mina, Gagnier Brenda, de Pokomandy Alexandra, Loutfy Mona. Substance use patterns among women living with HIV compared with the general female population of Canada. Drug and alcohol dependence; volume 191: 70-77; 2018.

142. Carter A, Roth EA, Ding E, Milloy MJ, Kestler M, Jabbari S, Webster K, DE POKOMANDY A, Loutfy M, Kaida A. Substance Use, Violence, and Antiretroviral Adherence: A Latent Class Analysis of Women Living with HIV in Canada. AIDS and Behavior; 22 (3): 971-985; 2018.

143. Carter A, Greene S, Money D, Hogg RS, Sanchez M, Webster K, Nicholson V, Salters K, Brotto LA, Hankins C, Kestler M, Pick N, O’Brien N, Patterson S, Proulx-Boucher K, de Pokomandy A, Loutfy M, Kaida A, CHIWOS Research Team. Supporting the sexual rights of women living with HIV: A critical analysis of sexual satisfaction and pleasure across five relationships types. Journal of Sex Research; volume 7: 1-21; 2018.

144. Hong QN & Pluye P. Systematic reviews: A brief historical overview. Education for Information (Special Issue); 34 (4): 261-276; 2018.

145. Giguère A, Lawani MA, Fortier-Brochu E, Carmichael PH, Légaré F, Kroger E, Witteman HO, Voyer P, Caron D, Rodriguez C. Tailoring and Evaluating and Intervention to Improve Shared Decision Making among Seniors with Dementia, Their Caregivers and Healthcare Providers: Protocol of A Cluster Randomized Trial. Trials; 19 (1): 332; 2018.

146. Rajeh M, Nicolau B, Qutob A, Pluye P, Esfandiari S. The development and validation of a questionnaire measuring barriers tocareer progression faced by women dentists in Saudi Arabia. Open Journal of Social Sciences; 6 (3): 131-146; 2018.

147. Yaffe, Mark J. The Doctor Shortage. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society; November 2018, 66 (11): 2222; 2018.

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148. Justin Gagnon, Marie-Thérèse Lussier, Brenda MacGibbon, Stella S Daskalopoulou, Gillian Bartlett. The Impact of Antidepressant Therapy on Glycemic Control in Canadian Primary Care Patients with Diabetes Mellitus. Frontiers of Nursing; 5 (47); 2018.

149. Cockcroft A, Omer K, Gidado Y, Baba MC, Aziz A, Ansari U, Gamawa AI, Yarima Y, Andersson N. The impact of universal home visits with pregnant women and their spouses on maternal outcomes: a cluster randomized controlled trial in Bauchi State, Nigeria. BMJ Global Health; volume 4: e001172; 2018.

150. Bartlett G, Macgibbon B, Rubinowicz A, Nease C, Dawes M, Tamblyn R. The Importance of Relevance: Willingness to Share eHealth Data for Family Medicine Research. Frontiers in Public Health; 6 (255): 1-5; 2018.

151. Carter A, Greene S, Money D, Sanchez M, Webster K, Nicholson V, Brotto LA, Hankins C, Kestler M, Pick N, O’Brien N, Salters K, Patterson S, Proulx-Boucher K, de Pokomandy A, Loutfy M, Kaida A, CHIWOS Research Team. The importance of sex in the lives of women living with HIV: A critical quantitative analysis. International Journal of Sexual Health; 30 (1): 92-110; 2018.

152. Carter A, Greene S, Money D, Sanchez M, Webster K, Nicholson V, Brotto LA, Hankins C, Kestler M, Pick N, O’Brien N, Salters K, Patterson S, Proulx-Boucher K, DE POKOMANDY, A, Loutfy M, Kaida A. The importance of sex in the lives of women living with HIV: A critical quantitative analysis. International Journal of Sexual Health; 30 (1): 92-110; 2018.

153. Waibel S, Wong S, Katz A, Levesque JF, Nibber R, Haggerty J.. The influence of patient-clinician ethnocultural and language concordance on continuity and quality of care: a cross-section analysis. CMAJ Open; 6 (3): E276-E284; 2018.

154. Cockcroft A, Marokoane N, Kgakole L, Kefas J, Andersson N. The Inter-ministerial National Structural Intervention Trial (INSTRUCT): protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial of a structural intervention to reduce HIV among young women in Botswana. BMC Health Services Research; volume 18: 822; 2018.

155. Hong QN, Fàbregues S, Bartlett G, Boardman F, Cargo M, Dagenais P, Gagnon M-P, Griffiths F, Nicolau B, O’Cathain A, Rousseau M-C, Vedel I, Pluye P. The Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT) version 2018 for information professionals and researchers. Education for Information (Special Issue); 34 (4): 285-291; 2018.

156. Longo C , Bartlett G , Schuster T , Ducharme FM , MacGibbon B , Barnett TA. The obese-asthma phenotype in children: An exacerbating situation? Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology; 141 (4): 1239-1249; 2018.

157. Wilchesky M, Mueller G, Morin M, Marcotte M, Voyer P, Aubin M, Carmichael PH, Champoux N, Monette J, Giguère A, Durand P, Verreault R, Arcand M, Kröger E.. The OptimaMed intervention to reduce inappropriate medications in nursing home residents with severe dementia: results from a quasi-experimental feasibility pilot study. BMC Geriatrics; 18 (1): 204-214; 2018.

158. I led all aspects. The wiki toolkit for planning, conducting and reporting mixed studies reviews. Education for Information (Special Issue); 34 (4): 277-283; 2018.

159. Ebell M, Grad RM. Top 20 Research Studies of 2017 for Primary Care Physicians.. American Family Physician; 97 (9): 581-588; 2018.

160. Gonzalez-Reyes A, Pluye P, Power B, Emberley P, & Grad R [I am the supervisor of the 1st author and the most important contributor after the 1st author]. Top 5 primary care topics for pharmacists in 2016. Canadian Pharmacists Journal; 151 (3): 176-178; 2018.

161. Grad RM, Ebell M. Top POEMs of 2017 consistent with the Choosing Wisely Campaign. American Family Physician; 98 (2): 93-98; 2018.

162. Bell NR, Dickinson JA, Grad RM, Singh H, Kasperavicius D, Thombs BD. Understanding and Communicating Risk: Measures of Outcome and the Magnitude of Benefits and Harms. Canadian Family Physician; 64 (3): 181-185; 2018.

163. Tremblay MC, Martin DH, McComber AM, McGregor A, Macaulay AC. Understanding community-based participatory research through a social movement framework: a case study of the Khanawake Schools Diabetes prevention Project. BMC Public Health; 18 (1): 487; 2018.

164. Touati N, Maillet L, Paquette MA, Denis JL, Rodriguez C. Understanding Multilevel Governance Processes through Complexity Theory: An Empirical Case Study of the Quebec HealthCare System. International Journal of Public Administration; 42 (3): 205-217; 2018.

165. Hovey RB, Seganathy E, Morck A, Phillips M, Poulette A, King M, Macaulay AC, Gruber R. Understanding the sleep habits of children within an Indigenous community. International Journal of indigenous Health; 13 (1): 42-64; 2018.

166. McCusker J, Yaffe MJ, Lambert SD, Cole MG, de Raad M, Belzile E, Ciampi A, Amir E, Hidalgo M. Unmet needs of family caregivers of hospitalized older adults preparing for discharge home. Chronic Illness; Epub ahead of print: 1–15; 2018.

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167. Anthoula Lazaris, Abdellatif Amri, Stephanie K Petrillo, Paublo Zoroquiain, Nisreen Ibrahim, Ayat Salman, Zu‐Hua Gao, Peter B Vermeulen, Peter Metrakos. Vascularization of colorectal carcinoma liver metastasis: insight into stratification of patients for anti‐angiogenic therapies. The Journal of Pathology; volume 4: 184-192; 2018.

168. Giguère AMC, Lebel P, Morin M, Prust F, Rodriguez C, Carnovale V, Champagne L, Légaré F, Carmichael PH, Martineau B, Karazivan P, Durant PJ. What Do Clinical Supervisors Require to Teach Residents in Family Medicine How to Care for Seniors? Canadian Journal on Aging/ La revue canadienne du vieillissement; 3 (1): 1-18; 2018.

169. Malagon T, Burchell A, El-Zein M, Guenon J, Tellier PP, Coutlee F, Franco EL. Y Chromosome DNA in Women's Vaginal Samples as a Biomarker of Recent Vaginal Sex and Condom Use With Male Partners in the HPV Infection and Transmission Among Couples Through Heterosexual Activity Cohort Study. Sexually Transmitted Diseases; 45 (1): 28-34; 2018.

170. Malla A, Shah J, Iyer S, Boksa P, Joober R, Andersson N, Lal S, Fuhrer R. Youth Mental Health Should Be a Top Priority for Health Care in Canada. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry; 63 (4): 216-222; 2018.

Books & Book Chapters

1. Pozer J. Primer: Everything You Need to Know and Do Before Film School. Tellwell Talent; Editors: Gagnon J, Gagnon M; 2018. Victoria, Canada.

2. Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé. [Cahier Scientifique]. Editors: Bujold M, Hong QN, Ridde V, Bourque CJ, Dogba MJ, Vedel I, Pluye P. Cahier scientifique de l’Acfas; ACFAS. 117; 2018. Montreal, Canada.

3. Simard M, Marcotte M, Pluye P, Sirois C, Champoux N, Arcand M, Verreault R, Wilchesky M, Voyer P, Giguère A, Kröger E. Attitudes et comportements des aînés et de leurs proches face à la polypharmacie ou à la déprescription: une revue mixte de la littérature. Dans Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé. Ed. Cahier scientifique ACFAS, M Bujold, QN Hong, V Ridde, CJ Bourque, MJ Dogba, I Vedel, P Pluye. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). 117, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

4. Ramsden VR, Crowe J, Rabbitskin N, Danielle Rolfe D, Macaulay AC. Authentic Engagement, Co-Creation and Action Research. In How to do Primary Care Research. Ed. F Goodyear-Smith & B Mash on behalf of the World Organization of Family Doctors (WONCA). CRC Press, Medicine, Taylor & Francis Group. , 2018. , .

5. Nyqvist KH, Campbell SH, Haiek LN. Breastfeeding and the Preterm Infant. In Core Curriculum for Interdisciplinary Lactation Care. Ed. Lactation Education Accreditation & Approval Review, Hetzel Campbell S, Lauwers J, Mannel R, Spencer B. Jones & Bartlett Learning. , 2018. Burlington, MA, United States.

6. Bujold M, Hong QN, Bourque CJ, Dogba MJ, Ridde V, Vedel I, Turcotte E, Pluye P. Conclusion - Méthodes Mixtes Francophonie: vers un développement interdisciplinaire et interculturel des méthodes mixtes. In In Cahier scientifique Acfas #117 - Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé. Ed. , Bujold M, Hong QN, Ridde V, Bourque CJ, Dogba MJ, Vedel I, Pluye P. Association francophone pour le savoir (Acfas), 2018, Canada.

7. Pimentel J, Zuluaga G, Isaza A, Molina A, Cockcroft A, Andersson N. Curriculum Co-design for Cultural Safety Training of Medical Students in Colombia: Protocol for a Qualitative Study. In Computer Supported Qualitative Research: New Trends on Qualitative Research. Ed. Springer; 861, 2018. Geneve, Switzerland.

8. Haggerty J. Early Detection and Counselling of Problem Drinking. In The Canadian Guide to Clinical Preventive Health Care. Ed. Goldbloom R.B.; Canada Communication Group; Ottawa.

9. Beauchet O, Bergman H, Caplan R, Fuks A, Gauthier S, Gold P, Morais J, Campeau L, Ferrier C, Karunananthan S, Launay C, Mahdanian A, Mallet L, Monti De Flores S, Perskin R, Shamout S, Yaffe M, Yin H. Elder Abuse. In The care of the older person. Ed. Beauchet O, Bergman H, Caplan R, Fuks A, Gauthier S, Gold P, Morais J. RMC Publishing; 2018; Canada.

10. Salsberg J, Macridis S, Delormier T, Hovey R, Andersson N, McComber A, Macaulay AC. Engaging communities to identify needs and develop solutions: Participatory research incorporates community voice in all aspects of health research decision-making. In Under-Served: Health Determinants of Indigenous, inner-City, and Migrant Populations in Canada. Ed. Neil Arya & Thomas Piggott. Canadian Scholars Press, 2018, Canada.

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11. Law S, Ormel I, Loutfi D, Lavis J. Experience as evidence for healthcare policy. In Illness Narratives in Practice: Potentials and Challenges of Using Narratives in Health-related Contexts. Ed. Lucius-Hoene G, Holmberg C, Meyer T. Oxford University Press, 2018. London, United Kingdom.

12. Karunananthan S, Bergman H. Frailty. In The Care of the Older Person. Ed. Beauchet O, Bergman H, Caplan RM, Fucks A, Gauthier S, Gold P, Morais JA. RMC Publishing, 2018.

13. Schuster T. How to conduct observational studies. In How to Do primary care research. Ed. Felicity Goodyear-Smith, Robert Mash. CRC Press, 2018.

14. Rahimzadeh V, Bartlett G, Illes J. Interactive role-playing and health-related quality of life assessment in children with neurocognitive sequelae: A global neurethics research approach. In Global Mental Health and Neuroethics [IN PRESS]. Ed. D Stein, I Singh, D Stein and I Singh, 2018.

15. Bujold M, Hong QN, Pluye P. Introduction - Transcender les frontières disciplinaires pour affronter les défis des méthodes mixtes. In Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé [Cahier scientifique ACFAS]. Ed. , Bujold M, Hong QN, Ridde V, Bourque CJ, Dogba MJ, Vedel I, Pluye P. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). 2018, Canada.

16. Bujold M, Pluye P. Les défis de l’apprentissage des méthodes mixtes en sciences de la santé: le voyage de Candide à la recherche du meilleur des deux mondes (chapitre 3). In Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé [Cahier scientifique ACFAS]. Ed. , M Bujold, QN Hong, V Ridde, CJ Bourque, MJ Dogba, I Vedel, & P Pluye. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). Issue 117, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

17. Hong QN, Pluye P, Bujold M, Wassef M. Les défis des revues systématiques mixtes: devis de synthèse convergents et séquentiels (chapitre 2). In Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé [Cahier scientifique ACFAS]. Ed. Bujold M, Hong QN, Ridde V, Bourque CJ, Dogba MJ, Vedel I, Pluye P. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). Issue 117, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

18. Johnson-Lafleur J, Nadeau L, Jaimes A, Rousseau C, Pluye P. Les méthodes mixtes comme avenue d’amélioration de la rigueur scientifique et de l’éthique en recherche auprès de populations minoritaires et marginalisées: Étude de cas en santé mentale jeunesse transculturelle (chapitre 11). In Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé [Cahier scientifique ACFAS]. Ed. Bujold M, Hong QN, Ridde V, Bourque CJ, Dogba MJ, Vedel I, Pluye P. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). Issue 117, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

19. Hong QN, Turcotte-Tremblay AM, Pluye P. Les revues systématiques mixtes : un exemple sur le financement basé sur les résultats (chapter 6). In Santé mondiale. Ed. Ridde V, Dagenais C. Édition science et bien commun, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

20. Bujold M, Hong QN, Bourque C-J, Dogba MJ, Ridde V, Vedel I, Turcotte E, Pluye P. Méthodes Mixtes Francophonie: vers un développement interdisciplinaire et interculturel des méthodes mixtes (conclusion). In Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé [Cahier scientifique ACFAS]. Ed. Bujold M, Hong QN, Ridde V, Bourque CJ, Dogba MJ, Vedel I, Pluye P. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). Issue 117, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

21. Bush P, Haggerty J, Repchinsky C, Wright M, Loignon C, Granikov V, Macaulay A, Pelletier JF, Parry S, Bartlett G, Pluye P. Organizational Participatory Research in North America. In Participatory Health Research: Voices from Around the World. Ed. K. Kongats & M. T. Wright. Springer International Publisher, 2018, United States.

22. Salsberg J, Merati N. Participatory Health Research in North America: From Community Engagement to Evidence-Informed Practice. In Participatory Health Research - International Perspectives. Ed. Wright MT, Kongats K. Springer, 2018, United States.

23. Bush PL, Pluye P, Loignon C, Granikov V, Wright M, Pelletier JF, Bartlett G, Macaulay AC, Haggerty J, Parry S, Repchinsky C. Quels sont les processus clés associés aux effets de la Recherche Participative Organisationnelle ? Une revue participative systématique mixte: protocole (chapitre 14). In Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé [Cahier scientifique ACFAS]. Ed. , M Bujold, QN Hong, V Ridde, CJ Bourque, MJ Dogba, I Vedel, & P Pluye. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). 117, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

24. Bartlett G, Dickinson M, Schuster T. Randomised Controlled Trials in Primary Care. In How to do Primary Care Research. Ed. CRC Press-Taylor & Francis: Boco Raton, 2018.

25. Andermann A. Reforming Health Systems to Promote Equity and Improve the health of Underserved Populations. In Under-Served: Health Determinants of Indigenous, Inner-City, and Migrant Populations in Canada. Ed. , Arya N, Piggot T. Canadian Scholars Press, 2018.

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26. Pluye P, Garcia Bengoechea E, Granikov V, Kaur N, Tang D. Tout un monde de possibilités en méthodes mixtes: Revue des combinaisons des stratégies utilisées pour intégrer les phases, résultats et données qualitatifs et quantitatifs (chapitre 1). In Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé [Cahier scientifique ACFAS]. Ed. , M Bujold, QN Hong, V Ridde, CJ Bourque, MJ Dogba, I Vedel, & P Pluye. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). 117, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

27. Bujold M, Hong QN, & Pluye P. Transcender les frontières disciplinaires pour affronter les défis des méthodes mixtes. In Oser les défis des méthodes mixtes en sciences sociales et sciences de la santé [Cahier scientifique ACFAS]. Ed. , M Bujold, QN Hong, V Ridde, CJ Bourque, MJ Dogba, I Vedel, & P Pluye. Association francophone pour le savoir (ACFAS). 117, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

28. Pluye P. Un cadre conceptuel pour intégrer des phases, résultats et données qualitatifs et quantitatifs en méthodes mixtes. In Santé mondiale. Ed. Ridde V & Dagenais C. Édition science et bien commun, 2018. Montréal, Canada.

Reports 1. Atelier sur la littératie en recherche: Cahier du participant.. McGill Family Medicine Studies Online, 13: e02, 2018. El

Sherif R, Granikov V, Hong QN, Bush P, Pluye P. http://mcgill-fammedstudies-recherchemedfam.pbworks.com/w/file/fetch/127636241/%2BAtelier-litt%C3%A9ratie-en-recherche_Cahier-v2018-05-22_FR.pdf

2. Canadian Family Physicians' and Pharmacists' ratings of Highlights: Annual reports 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, and 2018. Canadian Pharmacist Association (CPhA), 2018. Pluye P, Gonzalez-Reyes A, Grad R.

3. Community engagement and participation - Toolguideline. Danish Refugee Council, 2018. Ormel I, ElBatal L. 4. Description dynamique des services (DDS) de santé et sociaux de première ligne du Québec : Évaluation de la phase 1

(2018) et planification de la phase 2 (2019). Quebec SPOR SUPPORT Unit, 2018. Turcotte S, Bénigeri, Pluye P. 5. Évaluation de l’infolettre et du site Internet Naître et grandir (rapports annuels en 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018). Naitre et

grandir, 2018. Pluye P, El Sherif R, Gonzalez-Reyes A, Bartlett G, Grad R. 6. Literature Review: Alzheimer’s Disease Policies in OECD Countries. Université de Sherbrooke, 2018. Guillette M,

Lanneville D, Couturier Y, Tannouche-Bennan S, Thiam Y, Belzile L, Vedel I, Bergman H. https://savoirs.usherbrooke.ca/handle/11143/14189.

7. Questionnaire Origin and Development Appraisal (QODA) checklist. McGill Family Medicine Studies Online, 13: e06 (in press), 2018. Hamzeh J, Kaur N, Bush P, Hudon C, Schuster T, Vedel I, Hong QN, Pluye P.

8. Report from the Health Professionals Deliberative Stakeholder Consultations: Recommendations for the PERSPECTIVE Website and Communication Tools submitted to the PERSPECTIVE Project. McGill University, 2018. Bartlett G, Gagnon J, Gagnon J, Puzhko S.

9. Research Literacy Workshop: Participant Booklet. McGill Family Medicine Studies Online, 13: e01, 2018. El Sherif R, Granikov V, Hong QN, Bush P, Pluye P. http://mcgill-fammedstudies-recherchemedfam.pbworks.com/w/file/fetch/127635911/%2BResearch-Literacy-Workshop_Booklet-v2018-05-22-ENG.pdf

10. Rethinking assumptions about delivery of healthcare: implications for universal health coverage. BMJ online rapid response, 2018. Gonzalez Reyez A, Karunananthan S, Godard-Sebillote C, Hacker Tepper M, Pluye P. https://www.bmj.com/content/361/bmj.k1716/rr.

11. The Organizational Participatory Research Evaluation Method (OPREM) [checklist]. McGill Family Medicine Studies Online, 13: e05, 2018. Hamzeh J, Pluye P, Bush P, Hudon C. http://mcgill-fammedstudies-recherchemedfam.pbworks.com/w/file/fetch/129032274/Hamzeh_OPREM%20Version%202_2018.pdf

12. The Purpose, Audience, Dimensions and Measurement Properties of Organizational Participatory Research Health Partnership Questionnaires [annotated bibliography]. McGill Family Medicine Studies Online, 13: e04, 2018. Hamzeh J, Pluye P, Bush P, Hudon C. http://mcgill-fammedstudies-recherchemedfam.pbworks.com/w/file/fetch/129032349/Hamzeh_OPREM%20Annotated%20Bibliography_2018.pf

13. Training a group of Intercultural Health Agents for the promotion of self-care in Cota. Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 2018. Sarmiento I, Charfolet A, Amaya C, Correal C, Zuluaga G.

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