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CIPSPC Awards

The co-host organizations of the 2011 Canadian Injury Prevention & Safety Promotion Conference would like to recognize the outstanding work of individuals and groups who are working to prevent injury.  Nominations will be accepted for awards in Leadership, Innovation, Advocacy, and Research.  Nominations close on September 30, 2011.  Please see below for more details.

Awards Details

Nomination Form

CCCIP Award for Collaborative Excellence

The Canadian Collaborating Centres for Injury Prevention Award for Collaborative Excellence is a new award which will be presented every second year at the Canadian Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion Conference. This award will recognize and celebrate the value and power of collaboration as the keystone of effective Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion practice in Canada.

The CCCIP Award for Collaborative Excellence will recognize a Collaborative that has systematically identified a significant injury challenge, that has recognized that the best approach for addressing that challenge is a collaborative one, that has worked together effectively to address it.

For more information about this award, visit cccip.ca or call Kathy Belton at (780) 492-9762.

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Monday
Jan172011

Conference Agenda

(Click here for satellite sessions)

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2011

12:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.Conference Registration open
5:00 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.Exhibits and Posters open
6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.Welcome Reception

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2011

7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Exhibits and Posters open
7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.Conference Registration open
7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m.Light Breakfast
8:30 a.m. – 9:45 a.m.Conference opens
“Shedding Light”
Moderator: Stephen Quinn
Opening Address: Dr. Charles Tator
Hockey Panel: Dr. Jamie Kissick, Dr. Carolyn Emery, Dahna Sanderson, Dr. Alison Macpherson, Dr. Michael Cusimano
9:45 a.m. – 10:15 Coffee Break
10:15 a.m. – 11:45 a.m.Concurrent Sessions
Aboriginal issues, sports injury, motor vehicle, surveillance, determinants of health, workplace, falls, trauma, social media
11:45 a.m. – 1:15 p.m.Lunch
1:15 p.m. – 2:45 p.m.“Stand Up / Speak Out”: Linkages Between Intentional & Unintentional Injury
Sheldon Kennedy
Dr. Sue Bennett
2:45 p.m. – 3:15 p.m.Coffee Break
3:15 p.m. – 4:45 p.m. Concurrent Sessions
4:45 p.m. – 5 p.m. Wrap-Up
5:15 p.m. – 5:45 p.m. Exhibits and Posters staffed
7:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. Dinner

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2011

7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m. Exhibits and Posters open
7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Conference Registration open
7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Light Breakfast
8:30 a.m. – 9:45 a.m. Keynote
Dr. Jeremy Shiffman and Dr. David Butler-Jones
9:45 a.m. – 10:15 a.m. Coffee Break
10:15 a.m. – 11:45 a.m. Concurrent Sessions
11:45 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. Lunch
12:45 p.m. – 2:15 p.m. Organize / Mobilize
Youth Champions Panel – SMARTRISK
Facilitator: Sarah Marshall
Panel: Caitlin Dobratz, William Hui, Jade Berg, Kate MacLeod
1:45 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. Keynote: Building Partnerships – Kelly Lendsay
2:30 p.m. – 2:45 p.m. Coffee Break
2:15 p.m. – 2:45 p.m. Concurrent Sessions
4:15 p.m. – 5:20 p.m. Closing Keynote - “Be Seen”
Dr. David Meddings & Dr. David Sleet
5:20 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Closing Remarks
Monday
Jan172011

Speaker Biographies

Stephen Quinn (Moderator – Shedding Light)

Stephen Quinn, a multiple Radio Television News Directors Association award winner, brings his energy, passions and wealth of journalism experience to the popular CBC radio show, On the Coast. Fresh from an eight-year stint as CBC’s provocative civic affairs reporter, Mr. Quinn delivers a daily dose of must-listen-to radio through news, reviews and interviews that keep Vancouverites informed on local issues, sports, weather and entertainment.

Dr. Charles Tator (Opening Address - Shedding Light)

Dr. Charles Tator is a brain surgeon who founded ThinkFirst Canada in 1992 and was President from 1992-2007. He is a Professor of Neurosurgery at the Toronto Western Hospital and University of Toronto, where he has held two research chairs. He is also a neuroscientist with a brain and spinal cord regeneration laboratory, and has a PhD in neuropathology. He has published many articles on injury prevention with a focus on prevention of brain injuries and spinal cord injuries. In 2008, the University of Toronto Press published his edited book, “Catastrophic Injuries in Sports and Recreation, Causes and Prevention - a Canadian study.” He is a member of the Order of Canada and was inducted into the Canadian Medical Hall of Fame. ThinkFirst is one of the leading agencies for the promotion of safety for Canada’s children and youth and has developed and disseminated targeted injury prevention programs for schools and sports and recreation.

Dr. Carolyn Emery (Shedding Light)

Dr. Emery is an associate professor in the Faculty of Kinesiology, Pediatrics and Community Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary.  She is an Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research Population Health Investigator, a Canadian Institutes of Health Research New Investigator and holds a Professorship in Pediatric Rehabilitation at the University of Calgary.  Her PhD in Epidemiology is from the Department of Public Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Alberta. Dr. Emery is the co-Chair of the Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre at the University of Calgary.  Dr. Emery has 22 years of clinical experience, including expertise in pediatric orthopedics and sport medicine. The primary focus of Dr. Emery’s research program is the identification of risk factors for injury and evaluation of prevention strategies to reduce the risk of injury in youth sport.

Dr. Jamie Kissick (Shedding Light)

Dr. Kissick is a sport medicine physician from Ottawa, practising at the Ottawa Sport Medicine Centre. He holds a Diploma in Sport Medicine from the Canadian Academy of Sport Medicine, and is a former president of this organization.  His main clinical interest is concussion in athletes. Dr. Kissick was head team physician of the Ottawa Senators (NHL) from 1992-2002, and has been a team physician for the Ottawa Renegades (CFL) and Ottawa Lynx (Triple A Baseball).  He is currently the team physician for the National Mens’ Sledge Hockey team.  Dr. Kissick has been part of the health care team at the Olympic Games, Paralympic Games, Pan American Games, World University Games and Canada Games.   He holds the 2006 Think First Public Education and Awareness Award and is a member of Think First’s Concussion Education and Awareness, Soccer Safety and Hockey Safety Committees.  

Dahna Sanderson (Shedding Light)

Ms. Sanderson works at The Pampered Chef as the Director of Marketing & Communications. She founded the Donald Sanderson Memorial Fund in memory of her son Donald, who died Jan. 2, 2009, after falling into a coma as a result of hitting his head on the ice during a hockey game. She is a former professional figure skating coach and for 20 years has coached and volunteered in sports and the community. With 20 years plus playing women’s slow pitch, she was a part of the 2000 Canadian championship winners. She is a member of the Vaughan Task Force related to sports and helmet safety.

Dr. Alison Macpherson (Shedding Light)

Dr. Macpherson received her PhD from the University of Toronto’s Institute of Medical Science preceded by a Master’s degree in Epidemiology and Biostatistics from McGill University.  Her research interests include prevention of childhood injuries in mainstream, First Nations, and Inuit children, and pediatric health services research.  She is an adjunct scientist at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES), a member of the LaMarsh Institute for Child and Youth Health, and a member of the Editorial Board of the journal Injury Prevention. She is currently the co-principal investigator on several CIHR grants, including the CIHR Team in Child Injury Prevention.

Dr. Michael Cusimano (Shedding Light)

Michael Cusimano, M.D., Ph.D., (ThinkFirst Canada Vice-President and Director of Research) is a neurosurgeon at St. Michael’s Hospital and Professor at the University of Toronto. Dr. Cusimano also has a Ph.D. in Educational Measurement and Evaluation from the Ontario Institutes for Studies in Education (OISE) at the University of Toronto. Dr. Cusimano holds cross appointments in the Department of Public Health Sciences and at OISE. He has been an active Board Member with ThinkFirst Canada for over ten years. He is a practicing Brain surgeon with a Phd in Education. Dr. Cusimano has published widely in the area of injury prevention including in the area of hockey injuries and primary prevention.

Sheldon Kennedy (Stand Up / Speak Out – Linkages Between Intentional & Unintentional Injury)

Sheldon Kennedy skated for three teams in his eight-year NHL career (Detroit Red Wings, Calgary Flames and Boston Bruins) and played for Canada’s gold-medal winning team in the 1988 World Junior Hockey Championship. He is best known for his courageous decision to speak out about the abuse he suffered over five years while a teenager under the care of his Major Junior Hockey league coach, which led to sexual assault charges against the coach. His life story was made into an award winning television movie and he has appeared on Oprah, ABC’s Nightline, W-5, The Fifth Estate and was nominated as Peter Jennings’ Man of the Week.

In 2006, Mr. Kennedy wrote, “Why I Didn’t Say Anything” a riveting account of the many psychological impacts of abuse. He continues to carry his message through Respect Group Inc., the company he co-founded, which provides empowering online education for the prevention of abuse, bullying and harassment in sport, schools and the workplace.

Dr. Sue Bennett (Stand Up / Speak Out – Linkages Between Intentional & Unintentional Injury)

Dr. Sue Bennett is a Professor of Pediatrics and Psychiatry at the University of Ottawa and a pediatrician and psychoanalyst and Director of the Child & Youth Protection Program at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Ottawa. Her clinical work with maltreated children, youth and their families spans more than two decades. She was a founding member and first president of the Child and Youth Maltreatment Section of the Canadian Pediatric Society. She has travelled widely and worked for several years as a pediatrician in the United Arab Emirates. More recently in the UAE, she developed a rehabilitation program for trafficked camel jockey children with UNICEF, organized the first national child protection conference for health professionals, conducted training for local professionals and assisted the government with the development of a child protection strategy.  

Dr. Bennett is an Associate of the International Institute for Child Rights and Development based at the University of Victoria and has been an International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect Councilor since 2008.

Dr. Jeremy Shiffman (Keynote)

Dr. Shiffman is Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy at American University. A political scientist by training, he researches the politics of health policy and administration in poor countries. He has a particular interest in health agenda setting: why some issues receive priority while others are neglected. Among other topics, he has investigated maternal survival, newborn survival, family planning, donor funding for health and health systems reform. His work has appeared in multiple journals, including The Lancet, The American Journal of Public Health, Social Science and Medicine, The British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology and The Bulletin of the World Health Organization. Prior to working in academia, he served as an executive with the international public relations firm Burson-Marsteller, and as a social worker, working with Vietnamese boat people.

Dr. David Butler-Jones (Keynote)

Dr. Butler-Jones, Canada’s first Chief Public Health Officer, heads the Public Health Agency of Canada, which provides leadership on the government’s efforts to protect and promote the health and safety of Canadians.

Dr. Butler-Jones has taught at both the undergraduate and graduate levels and has been involved as a researcher in a broad range of public health issues. He is a Professor in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Manitoba as well as a Clinical Professor with the Department of Community Health and Epidemiology at the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Medicine. From 1995 to 2002, Dr. Butler-Jones was Chief Medical Health Officer and Executive Director of the Population Health and Primary Health Services Branches for the Province of Saskatchewan.

Dr. Butler-Jones has served with a number of organizations including as: President of the Canadian Public Health Association; Vice President of the American Public Health Association; Chair of the Canadian Roundtable on Health and Climate Change; International Regent on the board of the American College of Preventive Medicine; Member of the Governing Council for the Canadian Population Health Initiative; Chair of the National Coalition on Enhancing Preventive Practices of Health Professionals; and Co-Chair of the Canadian Coalition for Public Health in the 21st Century.

Jade Berg (Youth Champions Panel)

Jade had had his driver’s license for just three days when he picked up two of his best friends to go for a drive. The friends often did risky stunts for a rush. So when Dieter suggested riding on the hood of the car, they all agreed. But as Jade picked up speed, Dieter began to slip off the car and Jade slammed on his brakes to avoid hitting him. Dieter fell and slid down the road on his head. He nearly died and now lives with a permanent brain injury. Jade, uninjured, was charged, lost his driver’s license for five years and felt ostracized by his family and community. He left his small town in Alberta and moved to British Columbia to start his life over. As a presenter, Jade helps educate young people about thinking through whether “it’s a smart risk or a stupid risk, because things happen so quickly and you can’t take them back.”

Caitlin Dobratz (Youth Champions Panel)

Caitlin grew up in Mattawa, Ontario and graduated from high school in 2008. Currently, she is living in North Bay, Ontario where she is attending Nipissing University. Caitlin is going into her third year and is studying Social Welfare and Development and Sociology. She enjoys reading, writing, watching movies and spending time with friends and family. After three years of involvement with SMARTRISK at her high school Caitlin joined the Youth Advisory Team in 2009 and has been actively involved for the last two years. The issue of injury is important to Caitlin because she feels that there are too many young people in today’s society who are taking dangerous risks without thinking about the consequences. Caitlin knows that something as simple as wearing a helmet while biking or skating could be the difference between life and death, and appreciates the positive message that SMARTRISK offers: that there are many ways to have fun while reducing your chance of injury.

Kate MacLeod (Youth Champions Panel)

Kate MacLeod grew up in Newmarket, Ontario and currently lives in Halifax Nova Scotia, and worked with the Health Promotion Youth Corps this past summer. She works specifically with Addiction Services at the Department of Health and Wellness with most of her work pertaining to prevention of harms related to alcohol use among youth. The two biggest projects that she was involved with over the last year since she started working here are No Magic Goat, a social marketing campaign created by Injury Free Nova Scotia, as well as Addiction Services, unwasted.ca. She is a recent graduate of the Health Promotion undergraduate degree program at Dalhousie University. 

William Hui (Youth Champions Panel) 

William Hui, P.Eng., is a transportation engineer at TransLink, the  regional transportation authority in Vancouver, British Columbia.  His work involves data analytics and transportation planning for Metro Vancouver.  His expertise is analysing and visualizing data, and has managed several large scale data collection projects.  He holds a Bachelors degree in civil engineering from the University of British Columbia, with a minor in information technology. 

William is currently serving as the chair of the Canadian Road Safety Youth Committee (CRSYC).  As a delegate to the inaugural World Youth Assembly for Road Safety, hosted by the World Health Organization in Geneva, Switzerland, William has been serving on the committee since 2007.  Over the past years, he has participated in the planning of Canadian Multidisciplinary Road Safety Conferences, and Days of Remembrance for Road Crash Victims.  William also serves as the webmaster for the Greater Vancouver section of the Institute of Transportation Engineers.

Kelly Lendsay (Organize/Mobilize - Building Partnerships)

Kelly Lendsay is President and CEO of Aboriginal Human Resource Council. He is recognized as one of Canada’s foremost innovators and social entrepreneurs of Aboriginal diversity in Canada. As Council President, Mr. Lendsay designs partnerships, programs and knowledge networks that transform leaders and employers into high performance organizations of inclusion. He is a proud Canadian of Métis, Cree and European ancestry and has helped grow the enterprise into one of Canada’s most recognized leading innovators in organizational inclusion performance. His vigorous speaking, writing and workshops are widely acclaimed as powerful announcements of the challenges and prospects of full Aboriginal participation in the Canadian economy.

Dr. David Meddings (Closing Keynote – “Be Seen”)

Dr. Meddings is with the World Health Organization’s Department of Violence and Injury Prevention and Disability. He conducts the Department’s work in response to small arms, landmines and human security, including the Armed Violence Prevention Programme, collaboration with UNDP and several other UN agencies. He also facilitates the Department’s work in support of policy development in countries as well as the work on capacity building - which includes the development and roll out of TEACH-VIP and Mentor-VIP.

Dr. Meddings was born in Canada where he obtained his degree in medicine and subsequent specialization in Community Medicine. He has earned several awards including the S. Stewart Murray Award and a Fellowship from the Medical Research Council of Canada. Prior to joining WHO, Dr. Meddings held several positions at field and headquarter levels with the International Committee of the Red Cross where his primary interests were armed violence and the integration of operational research with policy development.

Dr. David Sleet (Closing Keynote – “Be Seen”)

Dr. Sleet is a behavioral scientist and Associate Director for Science in the Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention at the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, where he is the senior adviser to the division on matters of science and policy.  Dr. Sleet’s work focuses on understanding the ways behavioral science can be used to prevent injuries. 

Highlights of Dr. Sleet’s contributions in the injury field include: leading the CDC campaign on the dangers of airbags to children; co-authoring the world report on road traffic injury prevention as well as 160 other publications; and putting into practice a child-proof lighter standard, which has saved an estimated 200-300 children every year from burns.  He and his team received the 2003 NHTSA Administrators Award for systematic reviews of traffic injury interventions and The President’s Award for Research from Mothers Against Drunk Driving in 2006.  His team’s research played a pivotal role in the passage of national legislation establishing the legal definition of DUI as a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08 percent or higher. He is adjunct faculty at Curtin University (Perth, Australia) and on teaching faculty at Emory University’s School of Public Health in Atlanta.

Wednesday
Dec012010

Satellite Meetings and Pre-Conference Workshops

Cafe Scientifique - Nov. 16

BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit, the Nova Scotia Department of Health and Wellness, and Safe Kids Canada, along with Preventable.ca, the BC Ministry of Health, the Atlantic Collaborative on Injury Prevention (ACIP), ThinkFirst Canada, the BC Medical Association and ski hill operators are pleased to host Protect your Melon: Snow Sport Helmets – Round Two on the afternoon of Wednesday, Nov. 16 in Room Stanley Park 2.

Protect your Melon: Snow Sport Helmets – Round Two will continue the discussion from the 2009 Café Put a Lid On It. Warm drinks and light refreshments will be served at Café style tables designed to set an “après ski” ambiance.  A local media celebrity will introduce our panelists: Alison Macpherson, York University; Brent Hagel, University of Calgary; and Shelina Babul, University of British Columbia who will discuss the research related to helmet use, from both an engineering and behavioural perspective.  This will be followed by a short Q & A from the audience, before breaking out into a World Café style discussion of powerful questions that will tap divergent thinking and allow for generation of collective wisdom.

Canadian Collaborative Centres for Injury Prevention (By Invitation Only) - Nov. 19

Delegates from provincial, national and territorial governmental agencies and non-governmental organizations will meet to assess and synthesize lessons learned from the conference and other knowledge exchange activities of 2011 and discuss current/pending joint projectives of the collaborative.

The CCCIP represents the core leadership in Canada’s injury prevention community. It is a collective of provincial centres across Canada which discusses and acts on common challenges and joint ventures to reduce and control injuries and to enhance the safety of the population. The majority of these centres operate with a provincial mandate for research, surveillance, program evaluation and, for some, education and communications.

Canadian Falls Prevention Curriculum (CFPC) Basic Workshop - Nov. 15 and 16

The Canadian Falls Prevention Curriculum (CFPC) provides those working with older adults the knowledge and skills needed to apply an evidence-based approach to the prevention of falls and fall-related injuries. Participants learn how to design, implement and evaluate a fall prevention program tailored to their work or community setting. Facilitated instruction leads learners through a process for involving seniors as partners in the development of effective strategies and interventions; applying current evidence-based, effective programs; and understanding the reliability and validity of existing resources and tools for screening and assessing fall risk. Based on the Public Health Approach to fall prevention, participants will define the problem of falls, identify risk factors, examine best practices, and learn how to design, implement and evaluate a fall prevention program. For more information and to register for this CFPC workshop, please contact Sarah at spph.cfpc@ubc.ca

Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program (CHIRPP) Annual Meeting - Nov. 15 and 16

CHIRPP is an emergency department-based surveillance system operating in 14 hospitals from across Canada and managed by the Public Health Agency of Canada. The CHIRPP Directors and Coordinators from participating hospitals gather at this annual meeting to discuss issues and challenges related to injury surveillance. This is an opportunity to exchange ideas related to data collection, analysis and knowledge dissemination as well as discuss past and future injury research.

Canadian Red Cross Injury Prevention Program Meeting (By Invitation Only) - Nov. 15 and 16

(meeting description forthcoming)

Canadian Red Cross RespectED Violence and Abuse Prevention Program Meeting (By Invitation Only) - Nov. 15 and 16 

(meeting description forthcoming)

Child Passenger Safety Session - Nov. 15

Safe Kids Canada and the AUTO21 Researcher Team  invite conference participants to attend the Child Passenger Safety Session on November 15, 2011 from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m.  This session will offer the following:
  • National and international reports will offer an overview of the current child passenger safety environment
  • Organizations actively engaged in child passenger safety will share their successes and challenges
  • A Booster Seat Tool Kit will be launched during this session
  • Join us for a “forward-facing” discussion that explores such topics as the effectiveness of car seat clinics, car seat technician training and legislation
All conference attendees are welcome; however registration is required due to space limitations.   To register, please contact Kristen Gane at kristen.gane@sickkids.ca

Identification and Mitigation of Environmental Factors in Ambulation-related Falls Including Those on Stairways - Nov. 16: Workshop

4 P.M. to 6 P.M.  Open to first 25 registrants.  Contact: Jake Pauls - 301-933-5275 - bldguse@aol.com

Workshop presenters Jake Pauls and Dr. Peter Barss have a combined eight decades of world-wide experience in the area of stairs and falls and have presented in Canada, the U.S. and overseas. The workshop builds on the latest epidemiological and etiological information on stairs as presented in June at the International Conference on Stairway Usability and Safety in Toronto. The presenters say that stair-related falls comprise up to a quarter of all falls for certain age groups and impose a burden of $1 million per hour of societal costs in Canada due largely to very low standards of design and construction here. The workshop is aimed at professionals working in public health research and practice; home and other building design and construction; facility management; fire protection engineering; building regulation; fire prevention services and forensic expert services.

Injury Prevention editor-in-chief Writing Workshop - November 17

Dr. Brian Johnston will be presenting a writing seminar at the conference on November 17th at 1:15. Dr. Johnston is the editor-in-chief of the leading international journal Injury Prevention. He will provide guidance and suggestions that will help you get your research published. This workshop will be of particular interest to students and new investigators. If you wish to attend, please RSVP to Dr. Alison Macpherson at alison3@yorku.ca. Space is limited, so please sign up prior to the conference.

P.A.R.T.Y. Program Coordinators - Nov. 15

Celebrate and Share Success! Please bring something to share with the group (videos, posters, music, stories, successes and challenges), and get support and ideas from your fellow coordinators. Prior to the meeting, please let Charles Senior know your audio-visual requirements, at (416) 480-5912 or at charles.senior@sunnybrook.ca (Please note access to internet may not be available.) Please forward or bring your presentation on USB and send an electronic version so we can include it in the minutes for those who are not able to attend. Following the meeting, presentations will be uploaded to the portal.

Play Safe Initiative National Meeting - November 16

The Play Safe Initiative (PSI) is a collaborative group responding to the urgent call from government and non-government organizations concerned with the personal, social and economic burden of acute and chronic injuries sustained as a result of participation in sport and physical activity. The objectives of this meeting are to: introduce PSI and WISE™ to injury prevention leaders across Canada; discuss opportunities for Pan-Canadian strategies; and identify regional stakeholders. Please visit www.playsafeinitiative.ca for more information. If you are interested in participating in this meeting please RSVP to Joanne Banfield, joanne.banfield@sunnybrook.ca. Please visit www.playsafeinitiative.ca for more information.

Safe Communities Canada - November 16

The Safe Communities Canada pre-conference is a national one day session at which a minimum of 30 member communities from across Canada will meet in a members-and-invited-guests-only session to share knowledge about mobilization strategies and effective programming to enhance injury prevention in Canadian Safe Communities.