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ATLANTIC HEALTH EXPLORATION AND DISCOVERY
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Organizing Committee
    • Student Steering Committee
  • Our Events
    • CHR Conference Summer 2021 >
      • Keynote Address
      • Panel Presentations
      • Middle/High School Science Projects
      • Five-Minute Thesis
      • Poster Presentations
    • Twelve Days of Research 2020 >
      • 12 Days AHEAD Blog Posts
    • CHRW Spring 2020 >
      • Five-Minute Thesis
      • Poster Presentations >
        • Posters
      • ASD-South Science Fair >
        • Return of Diseases
        • The Five-Second Rule
        • Bacteria Growth
        • Concussion Myths
        • Mind Ready
        • Gaming and Your Health
        • Performance
        • Radishes
  • Contact

Where Are They Now? Checking In With Our June 2020 Award Winners

12/12/2020

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Jessie was the winner of AHEAD Spring 2020's Poster Competition, for her presentation entitled, Occupational Stress and Anger: Mediating Effects of Resiliency in First Responders. She continues to work on her doctoral studies at the University of New Brunswick, under the supervision of Dr. Mary Ann Campbell. 
Katie was the winner of AHEAD Spring 2020's Five-Minute Thesis Competition, for her presentation entitled, Promising treatment potential of a potent caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE) analog for diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. She is currently working as a research technician under Dr. Alli Murugesan and Dr. Tony Reiman's supervision. 

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Allyship and Activism: Integral Parts of Indigenous Research

12/11/2020

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In plain language, what is your project about? What questions are you trying to answer by doing this research
The Mawoluhkhotipon Ally & Safe Space Program for Wabanaki and Indigenous Peoples is a program that brings insight to Indigenous culture and understanding on the impacts of colonization. It was developed three years ago in partnership with Elders and Indigenous community members in the province, and provides a springboard for training our community in allyship, and for conducting research and evaluation on Indigenous content in academic and community programs. 
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The Art of Scientific Discovery: How to Creatively Communicate the Biology and Chemistry of Cancer

12/10/2020

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In plain language, what is your project about? What questions are you trying to answer by doing this research?
Multiple myeloma is the second most common type of blood cancer mostly affecting the elderly. Myeloma patients are often treated with chemotherapy and sometimes by bone marrow transplants. While the existing chemotherapy treatments work and maintain remission, there is still no cure for multiple myeloma. Current drugs or treatment approaches create undesirable side effects. An important goal of myeloma research is to find new treatments that not only improve patients’ survival, but also their quality of life.

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Promoting Mental Health and Wellbeing through Affordable Housing: How One Professor Engages Collaborators as Equal Partners in Research

12/9/2020

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In plain language, what is your project about? What questions are you trying to answer by doing this research?
HOME-RL (the Housing, Mobilization, Engagement & Resiliency Lab) conducts community-based, high impact research on the role that housing, social services, and community programming plays as fundamental contributors to social, physical, and mental wellbeing.
 
Currently, our largest project is the Maritime Community Housing & Health Initiative. This project has a few different components, but we are currently focusing on the first and largest phase of the study that explores the impact of publicly funded housing initiatives (rent-geared-to-housing and rent supplements) on mental health, wellbeing, and resilience in low-income households. We want to answer the question: do public housing affordability interventions promote wellbeing in low-income households? To do this, we are surveying people who are waiting for housing every 6 months for 18 months. Once they receive the affordable housing intervention, we survey them as part of an intervention group at 6 month intervals for an additional 18 months. By doing this, we can compare the mental health and wellbeing of people waiting for affordable housing interventions with that of those who have received them and see if there are any differences.  

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Integrated Health Care Researchers on Building Strong Collaboration: Communication is Key

12/8/2020

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In plain language, what is your project about? What questions are you trying to answer by doing this research?
Individuals with chronic health conditions and complex healthcare needs require a range of services from various systems (e.g. health, social, education) and community networks. To integrate all of the programs from different systems to meet someone’s needs is often challenging, and difficulties in providing coordinated care to these individuals places them at an increased risk for disability, early death, and a lower quality of life.
 
One solution to this problem is case management. It’s a collaborative approach to care that is used to assess, plan, facilitate, and coordinate all of the services needed to meet individual patients’, and their families’, healthcare needs. Case management also provides patients with regular follow up by a nurse within their primary care provider’s practice.

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Defining Your Unique Needs for Research Success: Behind the Scenes of a Study on COVID-19 Public Policy

12/7/2020

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In plain language, what is your project about? What questions are you trying to answer by doing this research?
Alcohol is a commonly-used drug with well-known risks. Canadian provincial governments allowed alcohol stores to remain open during the COVID-19 pandemic, because they predicted that closing the stores would have a significant impact on people who are dependent on alcohol. However, the decision to keep alcohol stores open and increasing the ease of access (e.g., delivery) could have other public health implications. Anecdotally, we have heard from health care that this decision may have led to fewer people coming to the emergency room for acute drinking-related injuries, such as alcohol-related violence or injuries resulting from drinking and driving.

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Teaching Interdisciplinary Collaboration to the Next Generation: UNB’s New Undergraduate Bachelor of Health Program

12/6/2020

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While not a research project, the recent launch of the University of New Brunswick’s Bachelor of Health program was another demonstration of the interdisciplinary collaborations that continue to thrive at the Tucker Park campus. The new four-year undergraduate program is unique in Canada, and just welcomed its first cohort of twenty-plus students this September.

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Doing “Big Science” Outside Your Comfort Zone: Lessons from a Study on Quality of Life After the Cancer Diagnosis

12/5/2020

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In plain language, what is your project about? What questions are you trying to answer by doing this research?
With continued improvements in medicine, more cancer patients are becoming cancer survivors than in the past. The question that we asked in this study was, are there long-term effects of a cancer diagnosis on a survivor’s overall physical and psychological health? How are factors, such as social connectedness, resilience, anxiety, and depression, influencing psychological well-being (for example, people’s perception of happiness) and physical wellness (energy, fatigue, pain, and so on) in people who have been diagnosed with cancer?

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Growing a Research Collaboration that Delivers Innovative Pulmonary Rehabilitation to the Community

12/4/2020

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In plain language, what is your project about? What questions are you trying to answer by doing this research?
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a significant health concern in New Brunswick, affecting one in five seniors in the province. As our population continues to age, we will see more individuals develop, and live, with this chronic lung disease. COPD is also one of the highest causes of illness and death, and the second highest cause of being admitted to hospital (after childbirth), in NB.
 
To help manage this public health issue, we need to start looking at new and innovative ways of providing health care; we need to extend beyond the hospital and clinic walls, and go into the communities to provide access to COPD rehabilitation and supportive care.

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Branching Outside the Research "Bubble" to Measure the Impact of COVID-19 on Mental Health

12/3/2020

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In plain language, what is your project about? What questions are you trying to answer by doing this research?
The novel coronavirus, COVID-19, is a respiratory illness that has had disastrous consequences around the world. In order to slow the spread of the virus, governments have implemented numerous social isolation and disease containment policies, including the Government of New Brunswick. The aim of our project is to investigate the impact of COVID-19 and the associated government response measures on the mental health of residents of New Brunswick through administration of an online survey. Additionally, we are interested in looking at how different demographic factors influence mental health and attempts to access support for mental health issues.

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  • Home
  • About Us
    • Organizing Committee
    • Student Steering Committee
  • Our Events
    • CHR Conference Summer 2021 >
      • Keynote Address
      • Panel Presentations
      • Middle/High School Science Projects
      • Five-Minute Thesis
      • Poster Presentations
    • Twelve Days of Research 2020 >
      • 12 Days AHEAD Blog Posts
    • CHRW Spring 2020 >
      • Five-Minute Thesis
      • Poster Presentations >
        • Posters
      • ASD-South Science Fair >
        • Return of Diseases
        • The Five-Second Rule
        • Bacteria Growth
        • Concussion Myths
        • Mind Ready
        • Gaming and Your Health
        • Performance
        • Radishes
  • Contact