How AI is remaking medicineHow AI is rewriting medicine. Links to the latest research using AI tools for diagnostic testing, mental health support and predicting diseases.
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Two days ago, my research team and family joined a powerful walk for Indigenous women's justice in Thompson, Manitoba. We walked to interrupt Indigenous-specific racism in prenatal and birth care—a racism that has no place in healthcare systems meant to nurture life. We walked to restore the ceremony and celebration of birth to Indigenous families, acknowledging that birth is not merely a medical event but a sacred moment that deserves to be honored with cultural integrity and joy. This walk emerged from our CIHR-funded health systems intervention grant, "Ikiskawasoot" (She Carries Life), and it represents what I believe research must be: both a generator of knowledge and a catalyst for justice. Indigenous women across Canada face systemic barriers and discrimination during one of life's most vulnerable moments—bringing new life into the world. The data tells us what Indigenous communities have known for generations: that racism in healthcare is not only real but can be deadly. When Indigenous women are denied cultural practices, face racism and mistreatment, or are separated from their communities during birth, we fracture the sacred bonds that support new life and the next generation. This is not just a healthcare failure; it's a human rights issue that demands immediate action. It's a legacy of cultural genocide. It must end now I've come to believe that research without action is incomplete. Knowledge generation that doesn't challenge injustice isn't living up to its potential. "Ikiskawasoot" has taught me that meaningful research doesn't stop at publications—it walks in the streets, it challenges systems, it stands with communities demanding change. To my fellow researchers: our work must do more than document harm. It must dismantle it. It must create space for ceremony, celebration, and justice. Because research that doesn't serve the people it's about isn't really serving anyone at all. CIHR Grant: https://lnkd.in/ev4EGmAp Voices of women are medicine: https://lnkd.in/evzRXGk5 Weekly emerging scholar blogpost for the National Day of Truth and Reconciliation:
The responsibility you carry when you wear an orange shirt in Canada. Check out this week's newsletter from the Emerging Scholar Podcast:
https://lnkd.in/e8aRWUmy Released last week in JAMA- JAMA Pediatrics: https://lnkd.in/exDSBnAP
As part of our on-going JDRF/FRDJ Canada / CIHR Institute of Population and Public Health (IPPH) funded trial of peer mentoring and type 1 diabetes (www.teamtrial.ca), we asked two simple questions about automated insulin devices and adolescent health outcomes: How well do they work in the real world, for prolonged periods for teens and are they improving their quality of life? Surprising we found little quality evidence to guide the answer. In partnership with young adult mentors living with T1D and patient partners from Diabetes Action Canada | CIHR SPOR Network, we launched into a systematic review and meta-analysis of RCTs comparing AIDs to all forms of diabetes management. What did we find? Among 902 youth with T1D (n=11 trials) followed for, on average, 31 weeks: (1) AIDs dramatically improve time in range for youth with T1D by a whopping 11%!, This is coupled with a modest 0.4% improvement in A1c. (2) The gains in time in range are driven largely by reducing time in hyperglycemia, and these effects are driven almost entirely during the night time. (3) There is a glaring absence of studies that inclde health outcomes relevant to teen and families living with T1D. So alot of room for more research in this area. We are grateful to everyone that contributed and our on going support from DREAM Trainees Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba University of Manitoba Rady Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Manitoba JDRF/FRDJ Canada
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September 2025
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