SPOR Networks
SPOR Networks are pan-Canadian collaborative research networks involving patients, researchers, health care professionals, policy makers, academic health centres, health charities, and other stakeholders. They focus on specific health areas identified as priorities in multiple provinces and territories. The Networks address research priorities identified by patients and speed up the use of research findings into patient care and health care policy.
CIHR currently funds the following SPOR Networks:
- Chronic Disease
- CHILD-BRIGHT Network
- Chronic Pain Network
- Diabetes Action Canada
- Inflammation, Microbiome, and Alimentation: Gastro-Intestinal and NeuropsychiatricEffects: the IMAGINE-SPOR Chronic Disease Network
- Listening, Learning, Leading: Canadians Seeking Solutions and Innovations to Overcome Chronic Kidney Disease (Can-SOLVE CKD)
- SPOR Primary Care Research Network
- Youth and Adolescent Mental Health – ACCESS Open Minds
Chronic Disease
In Canada, few people are untouched by chronic disease. In fact, three out of five people over the age of twenty live with one or more non-communicable chronic disease. While Canada has a strong foundation on which to build, a number of factors impede the flow of information from basic biomedical research through clinical research to changes in patient care and improved health outcomes. These research networks are seeking to change that by testing innovations that can improve clinical science and practice, foster policy changes, and lead to transformative and measurable improvements for patients living with chronic disease.
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CHILD-BRIGHT Network
CHILD-BRIGHT Network
Nominated Principal Investigator: Dr. Annette Majnemer
Institution: Research Institute of the McGill University Health CentreThe CHILD-BRIGHT Network, headquartered at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre (RI-MUHC) and co-directed by investigators at the BC Children's Hospital and The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids), is an innovative pan-Canadian network that aims to improve life outcomes for children with brain-based developmental disabilities and their families. Using child- and family-focused approaches, the Network creates novel interventions to optimize development, promote health outcomes, and deliver responsive and supportive services
Objectives and Priority Areas:
- Create meaningful partnerships with patients, parents and policy makers in order to prioritize and develop innovative and timely interventions and services that will transform outcomes and change the lives of children with brain-based developmental disabilities and their families
- Put in place the infrastructure for a learning community through research, training, and knowledge translation activities
- Shape the patient-oriented research agenda and knowledge mobilization efforts by meaningfully engaging key stakeholders while paying careful attention to seek the voices of those who may experience greater health care needs due to socio-demographic factors,or those whose voices are insufficiently heard
Website: CHILD-BRIGHT Network
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Chronic Pain Network
Chronic Pain Network
Nominated Principal Investigator: Dr. Norman Buckley
Institution: McMaster UniversityThe Chronic Pain Network (CPN) is a national collaboration of patients, researchers, healthcare professionals, educators, industry and government policy advisors to direct new research in chronic pain, train researchers and clinicians, and translate findings into knowledge and policy.
Patients are engaged as partners, working with professionals to identify priorities to improve health outcomes, identify new treatments and deliver a more effective healthcare system to fellow Canadians. The CPN represents an unprecedented level of collaboration amongst national stakeholders. The Network supports, coordinates and synchronizes leading innovative and high-impact research with the ultimate goal of removing barriers to better chronic pain management.
Objectives and Priority Areas:
- Engaging patients in the process of identifying high priority research goals and using this to direct research activities
- Improving our understanding of factors (e.g. genetic, biological, psychological and social) that modify treatment effects of therapeutic options for chronic pain
- Improving support for chronic pain patients in self-management and enhancing "shared-care" decision making
- Discovery and confirmation of patient and biological characteristics associated with the development and perpetuation of chronic pain
Website: Chronic Pain Network
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Diabetes Action Canada
Diabetes Action Canada
Nominated Principal Investigator: Dr. Gary Lewis
Institution: University Health NetworkDiabetes Action Canada's mission is to transform the health outcomes of people with diabetes and its related complications. This will facilitate important, meaningful connections between patients, primary healthcare providers, and specialists to improve health care and significant cost savings within the health system. For people living with diabetes and their caregivers, this Network enables respectful communication with researchers to co-build studies producing solutions for the most important health concerns identified by patients. Diabetes Action Canada bridges the knowledge translation gap to alleviate suffering, morbidity, and mortality by aligning biomedical, clinical, population health and health services research with what patients, their caregivers and healthcare providers perceive as most urgent to improve diabetes and its related complications outcomes.
Objectives and Priority Areas:
- Address the questions repeatedly articulated by Canadians living with diabetes: "what is my individual risk for developing blindness, kidney failure, lower limb amputation or heart failure?" and "what are the most effective ways to mitigate these risks?"
- Understand the accuracy of predictive rules about which individuals with Type 1 (T1D) or Type 2 (T2D) diabetes are at the highest risk for onset and progression of retinopathy (eye damage), neuropathy (nerve damage), nephropathy (kidney damage) and cardiovascular disease
- Develop and apply user-friendly, customized diagnostic tools designed for both patients and healthcare providers to diagnose risk of complications as early as possible
- Evaluate new interventions based on technology and biomedical innovation, including lifestyle modifications targeted at preventing and reducing organ damage, new and repurposed drugs to reduce onset and prevent progression of diabetes complications, and novel automated glycemic control devices
Website: Diabetes Action Canada
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Inflammation, Microbiome, and Alimentation: Gastro-Intestinal and Neuropsychiatric Effects: the IMAGINE-SPOR Chronic Disease Network
Inflammation, Microbiome, and Alimentation: Gastro-Intestinal and Neuropsychiatric Effects: the IMAGINE-SPOR Chronic Disease Network
Nominated Principal Investigator: Dr. Paul Moayyedi
Institution: McMaster UniversityThe Inflammation, Microbiome, and Alimentation: Gastro-Intestinal and Neuropsychiatric Effects Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (IMAGINE-SPOR) Network aims to develop innovative therapies for Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) and Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). With 17 hospitals/universities and 75 researchers across Canada, this network engages patients as partners, focusing on patient-identified priorities to improve their health outcome, identify new treatments, and deliver a more effective health care system to Canadians. The IMAGINE Network is studying the interactions between the inflammation, microbiome, diet and mental health in patients with IBD and IBS.
The overarching hypothesis is that IBD and IBS are driven by a perturbation of the gut microbiome and the associated host immune response. Diet plays a key role in modulating the gut microbiome. Alterations in the gut microbiome may also drive anxiety and depression associated with these GI disorders. These mechanisms may have a genetic predisposition. The overall aims of this Network will be to identify the key mechanisms in this diet-microbiome-host relationship and test novel therapies for the treatment of IBD and IBS and the psychiatric disorders associated with these diseases.
Objectives and Priority Areas:
- Develop innovative therapies (changes in diet, probiotics, fecal transplants or antibiotics) to improve IBD, IBS and mental health
- Improve outcomes of existing therapies through the assessment of diet-microbiome-host interactions
- Develop strategies to optimize current therapies to target those who will most benefit from medication as well as identify those in whom medication can be safely discontinued with significant personal benefit and cost savings
Website: IMAGINE
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Listening, Learning, Leading: Canadians Seeking Solutions and Innovations to Overcome Chronic Kidney Disease (Can-SOLVE CKD)
Listening, Learning, Leading: Canadians Seeking Solutions and Innovations to Overcome Chronic Kidney Disease (Can-SOLVE CKD)
Nominated Principal Investigator: Dr. Adeera Levin
Institution: University of British ColumbiaCan-Solve CKD is a coast-to-coast partnership of patients, health care providers, policy-makers, and researchers working to transform treatment and care for the four million Canadians living with chronic kidney disease. The Network is built around a "patient first" philosophy that guides all activity and decision-making.Its 18 multidisciplinary research projects are based on key issues identified by patients over three years of priority-setting discussions. The unique needs and perspectives of patients, including Indigenous Peoples, are represented through two governance bodies: a Patient Council and Indigenous Peoples' Engagement and Research Council.
Objectives and Priority Areas:
- Identifying kidney disease earlier and supporting those who are at highest risk of negative outcomes
- Defining the best treatments to improve outcomes and quality of life
- Defining the optimal ways to deliver patient-centred care in the 21st century
Website: Can-SOLVE CKD
SPOR Primary Care Research Network
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SPOR Primary Care Research Network
Primary health care focusses on the provision of basic health care services, including health promotion, illness and injury prevention, and the diagnosis and treatment of illness and injury. It can also refer to a spectrum of services beyond the traditional health care system that play a part in health, such as income, housing, education, and environment.
Primary care is one of many research priorities in Canada. No health challenge, such as mental health, chronic illnesses, access to care, or discrimination in health care—can be successfully addressed in the absence of responsive, effective, efficient, and integrated primary health care informed by the highest quality evidence.
The SPOR Primary Care Research Network is an established pan-Canadian interdisciplinary and intersectoral network of people who collaborate on generating solution-focused innovations in primary health care delivery.
The SPOR Primary Care Research Network’s vision is to create a sustainable pan-Canadian primary health care learning health system platform supported by patient-oriented, practice-based research to improve patient and provider experiences in:
- delivering and receiving care
- population health
- health care system expenditures
The Network’s mission is to establish and grow provincial and territorial practice-based research and learning networks and a primary health care information system that will facilitate research to spread and scale innovations in primary health care across the country.
The SPOR Primary Care Research Network’s objectives are to:
- Build a primary health care learning health systems platform across Canada based on a primary health care information system and provincial/territorial practice-based research and learning networks
- Facilitate the reach and adaptation of successful patient-oriented primary and integrated care innovations
- Generate and mobilize knowledge that informs and transforms practice, clinical care, and decision-making for better and more equitable health outcomes
- Increase capacity among researchers, clinicians, decision-makers, patient partners, and Indigenous communities to develop and apply primary and integrated health care knowledge in practice
- Nurture a highly coordinated, decentralized Network with a tetrapartite governance structure (patient partners, policymakers, clinicians and researchers)
- Create sustainable partnerships with financial partners, other SPOR funded networks/units, Indigenous communities/organizations and other like-minded entities
- Provide support and opportunities for active engagement in Network activities for Indigenous people and other people marginalized in health care and research.
SPOR Primary Care Research Network was first established as the Primary and Integrated Health Care Innovations (PICHI) Network funded by SPOR. The new SPOR Primary Care Research Network will integrate and build upon PICHI to expand patient-oriented primary care innovations to new sites, settings, and populations.
For more information on the SPOR Primary Care Research Network, please contact the new Executive Director, Jamie DeMore, at Jamie.demore@ubc.ca.
Youth and Adolescent Mental Health – ACCESS Open Minds
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Youth and Adolescent Mental Health – ACCESS Open Minds
ACCESS Open Minds is bringing about transformational change in addressing adolescent and youth mental health and well-being. By connecting patients and youth with researchers, health care professionals, and decision-makers at sites across Canada, the Network aims to improve the care provided to young Canadians with mental illness by translating promising research findings into practice and policy. Led by Dr. Srividya Iyer at the Department of Psychiatry and an Associate Member in the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. The Network is a collaborative effort between CIHR and the Graham Boeckh Foundation, with each providing $12.5 million for a total investment of $25 million.
Website: ACCESS Open Minds
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