Congratulations to researchers funded in the Fall 2020 Project Grant competition
CIHR's Fall 2020 Project Grant competition results are now available. IHDCYH would like to congratulate the recently funded researchers who are working in reproductive, child, youth, and family health. We look forward to the results of these projects! We would also like to congratulate the nine teams who received bridge funding through three IHDCYH-supported Priority Announcements in the Fall 2020 Project grant:
Human Development, Child and Youth Health (Bridge funding)
- Annie M Pullen Sansfaçon (Université de Montréal): Growing up trans: An international longitudinal qualitative investigation of trans youth access gender affirming care, affirmation and well-being
- Ryan J Van Lieshout (McMaster University): Online Public Health Nurse-Delivered 1-Day Cognitive Behavioural Therapy-Based Workshops for Postpartum Depression
- Kristy D Wittmeier and Stephanie M Glegg (University of Manitoba): Using Social Network Analysis to Understand Knowledge Translation in Child Development and Rehabilitation
Data Analysis Using Existing Databases and Cohorts (IHDCYH)
- Yanfang Guo and Darine El-Chaar (Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute): Gestational weight loss in obese women and risk for adverse perinatal outcomes: a population-based retrospective cohort study
- Jennifer A Hutcheon (University of British Columbia): Every maternal death counts: understanding driving safety in pregnant and post-partum women
- Roman A Pabayo (University of Alberta): Understanding the Role of Social-Economic Inequality on Deaths Due to Drug Overdose, Suicide, and Alcoholic Liver Disease in Canada
Healthy pregnancy/early child development in Indigenous contexts
- Patricia A Janssen (University of British Columbia): Teaching by Texting to Promote Healthy Behaviours in Pregnancy
- Baiju R Shah (Sunnybrook Research Institute - Toronto, Ontario): Intergenerational impacts of diabetes among First Nations mothers and their children
- Brandy A Wicklow (University of Manitoba): The Next Generation Longitudinal Birth Cohort: Early childhood beta cell and renal function in offspring exposed to maternal T2D
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