Congratulations to recipients of the 2023 Institute Community Support Travel Awards
IHDCYH would like to congratulate all recipients of the 2023 Institute Community Support Travel Awards. This competition supports students, postdoctoral fellows, early career researchers and knowledge users to present their own research at national and international meetings, workshops, and/or conferences. Congratulations to the following group of grantees who were funded by IHDCYH:
- Kenzie Friesen, University of Calgary – Head acceleration events in female high school: An attempt to "take down" concussion in wrestling
- Camille Héguy, Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre – Do neonatal respiratory morbidities influence hippocampal development in preterm-born infants?
- Si Ning Liu, University of Alberta – Investigating the involvement of ferroptosis in neonatal late onset sepsis-induced liver injury
- Sarah W Palmis, Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre – Social determinants of children's neurodevelopment - A scoping review
- Elise Pauzé, University of Ottawa – The frequency and distribution of alcohol advertising on broadcast television in Canada and its potential implications for youth and public health policy
- Isabelle Petitclerc, Université Laval – L'association entre le profil cardiométabolique de la mère et la composition du microbiote intestinal de la mère et de l'enfant en contexte de diabète gestationnel
- Momina Raja, Dalhousie University (Nova Scotia) – Promoting Healthy Sleep for Children with Neurodevelopmental Disabilities and Parents in Hospital and at Home
- Zoe Ritchie, University of Western Ontario – The Moral Experience of Families in the Context of Trisomy 13 and 18: Presenting the Results of a Scoping Review
- Michael Shamash, McGill University – Applying fecal virome transplants to restore healthy gut microbiome development in early childhood
- Si Long Tou, Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital (Toronto) – Quantifying behavioral and neurologic plasticity induced by EEG visual P300-Brain Computer Interface-enabled neurologic music therapy in children with cerebral palsy
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