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emerging scholar weekly newsletter

10/16/2025

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How AI is remaking medicine

How AI is rewriting medicine. Links to the latest research using AI tools for diagnostic testing, mental health support and predicting diseases.
Read it on our substack
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Walking for Justice: When Research Meets Action

10/10/2025

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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
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The responsibility of wearing orange

10/10/2025

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Weekly emerging scholar blogpost for the National Day of Truth and Reconciliation:
The responsibility you carry when you wear an orange shirt in Canada.
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what we can learn from MAHA - Emerging scholar weekly blog post

9/24/2025

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What we can learning about using narratives to communicate science to the public.
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Weekly emerging scholar blogpost

9/18/2025

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Check out this week's newsletter from the Emerging Scholar Podcast:
https://lnkd.in/e8aRWUmy
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latest paper from the pace lab in JAMA Pediatrics

9/18/2025

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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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emerging scholar weekly newsletter: strong minds in a fragile time

8/27/2025

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We often think of mental health as a private struggle—something to be willed into balance. But new research tells a more complicated story: children can shape the emotional lives of their parents, communities can heal in ways medicine alone cannot, and something as ordinary as walking can soften despair. What if happiness is less about flipping on a light, and more about building the wiring together? Check out our latest Blogpost on this weeks discoveries in mental health here. 

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emerging scholar launches new substack newsletter

8/21/2025

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Subscribe for a weekly round up and discussion of the latest in the science of maternal child health. ​https://emergingscholar.substack.com/ 
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ikiskawasoot receives $4M cihr grant!

7/20/2025

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As this project transitions from a research project to a stand alone health systems intervention, Ikiskawasoot - She Carries Life, received a 5 year $4M grant in the recent CIHR Project grant competition to continue this important work, supporting First Nations women in northenr Manitoba during their pregnancies and improving prental and birthing care in Northern Manitoba.
Led by Indigenous scholars Dr Stephanie Sinclair and Lorraine McLeod this work will reshape the First Nations women are cared for during this most sacred time of their life. Results posted here.
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Weekly pediatric health blog june 30th 2025: consequences of teen hypertension and mechanisms linking screens and depression in early teen years

6/30/2025

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​Welcome fellow Springfielders to a new weekly series dedicated to bringing the latest advances in health science to your living rooms. As a health researcher, I am dedicated to generating the best scientific evidence to improve the health of Canadian families. As a public servant, I also feel an obligation to communicate to you the latest and greatest discoveries in health research. As most families do not have the time and energy to find and interpret the latest scientific health discoveries my goal with this editorial is to save you that time and energy. Each week, I plan to provide a brief summary on studies that I think will help us all make better health decisions and foster meaningful discussions with your health providers about the best choices for you and your family. So what’s new this week in health science?
Teen blood pressure and long-term health. High blood pressure is something we usually worry about in our spouses and parents, but don’t pay much attention to for our kids. However, one of every three teens living with obesity and 5% of all kids in Canada also have high blood pressure. A recent study led by researchers in Hamilton and one of my colleagues (Dr. Allison Dart) from the DREAM Theme at Winnipeg Children’s Hospital, followed over 150,000 teens from age 15 into their adult years and found that those with clinically elevated blood pressure (i.e. they needed medication or were referred to a specialist) were 3-times more likely to have major kidney problems by age 30. Luckily the rates of kidney disease were low in each group (1.7 vs 5.5 per 1000 kids per year). These studies remind us of two things. First, that screening for high blood pressure (and other risk factors for heart and kidney disease) in the teenage years is important (without knowing we have high blood pressure we can’t do anything about it). Second, our health as adults is grounded in our health as children, so creating healthy environments early is a great way to set up a lifetime of healthy living. This work was published in the June 24th issue of the Lancet Child and Adolescent Health.
Screen-time in childhood and teen depression. For this study, scientists in the US asked the question, Is there a link between screen time in childhood and depression risk in early adolescence? And if there is, why?” Using MRI images and questionnaires collected from nearly 1000 children aged 9-10 years from 21 cities in the US and followed to age 11-13 years, researchers compared those with the highest and lowest levels of screen time. They first found that every extra hour of time spent on screens (phone, computer, video chats, gaming and social media), the child’s depression score increased about 12%. Interestingly this link was driven by 2 things: first less sleep in the kids that had higher screen time and second, changes to the way to connections are made in their brains. These data are the first to document both the behavioural (sleep) and biological (brain connection links between screens and mental health in young teens. These discoveries reinforce the importance of keeping track of screen time use in our kids as a way to potentially prevent depression in their teen years and also how important sleep can be for the developing teen brain. This work was published in the June 23rd Issue of JAMA Pediatrics.
I hope this is something our community finds useful if not valuable and welcome feedback and ideas for future blog posts.
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