Page 11 - SREMI 2020 Annual Report
P. 11

Dr. Chris Carpenter
is Professor of Emergency Medicine at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, United States. He serves as the Deputy Editor-in-Chief of Academic Emergency Medicine and Associate Editor for the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. His transdisciplinary emergency medicine research focuses on diagnostic accuracy and ef ciency, dementia risk assessment, and implementation science. He has co-authored 175 peer-reviewed manuscripts and two textbooks. He also served as the NIH representative for the Enhancing the QUAlity and Transparency Of health Research (EQUATOR) Network Implementation Science reporting guidelines called the Standards for Reporting Implementation Studies (StaRI). He is a member of the Society of Academic Emergency Medicine Board of Directors, as well as the American College of Emergency Physician’s Geriatric Emergency Department Accreditation Board of Governors and Clinical Policy Committee, and American Board of Emergency Medicine’s MyEMCert editorial team. He also serves on the Clinician-Scientists Transdisciplinary Aging Research Leadership Core.
Dr. John McLaughlin
is a Professor in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto, and Executive Director of the Canadian Partnership for Tomorrow’s Health (CanPath), which is Canada’s largest health study with over 300,000 participants being followed in a prospective cohort study. He recently retired as the inaugural Chief Science Of cer at Public Health Ontario, and he has previously held several leadership roles across Ontario’s research and health systems. As an epidemiologist, he leads research that integrates diverse disciplines in studies of environmental, biological and societal determinants of health, which has led to more than 300 publications. As a professor and health system executive, he steers research and services to have high impact by focusing on advancing disease prevention, addressing disparities and improving health system performance.
Dr. Simon Moo aart
is a physician in internal medicine, with a focus on geriatrics at the Leiden University Medical Center in the Netherlands. His research focuses on evidence-based medicine for older patients with the aim to improve the quality of healthcare for older patients. In 2011, Dr. Mooijaart founded the national Institute for Evidence-based Medicine in Old Age | IEMO (www.iemo. nl), a collaboration of Dutch University Medical Centers, other knowledge institutions and industry. In 2012, Dr. Mooijaart initiated the Acutely Presenting Older Patient study (www.apop.eu), a prospectively collected cohort of over 2,700 older patients visiting the emergency department to identify patients at highest risk of poor outcomes and target interventions to improve outcomes.
Dr. Michael Schull
is CEO and Senior Scientist at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, Professor in the Department of Medicine at the University of Toronto, and a Senior Scientist at the Sunnybrook Research Institute. His research focuses on health service utilization, quality of care, health system integration and patient outcomes, and the evaluation of health policy. Under his leadership, ICES has expanded the types of data available for researchers, created a virtual platform where researchers outside ICES can access and analyze linked datasets, launched a health arti cial intelligence data and analysis platform, and engaged the public in the work of ICES to ensure it remains aligned with public values. Dr. Schull leads the participation of ICES in a pan-Canadian initiative to build a national health and social data platform. He practices as an Emergency Medicine specialist at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.
Dr. Lynn Wilson
is the Vice Dean, Clinical and Faculty Affairs and Associate Vice Provost, Relations with Health Care Institutions. She is a Professor of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Toronto. Dr. Wilson served as Chair of the Department of Family and Community Medicine (2007- 2015). As a member of the Physician Services Committee for the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-term Care, she helped to lead primary care renewal in Ontario (2002- 2007). Dr. Wilson was the co-director of BRIDGES, an Ontario Ministry of Health funded project to support the design, implementation and assessment of innovative models of care that promote integration in the healthcare system (2011-2016). Dr. Wilson has practiced comprehensive family medicine for over 30 years. Her clinical interests have included substance use disorders, mental health, palliative care, primary care obstetrics, and care of the elderly.
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