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Health Research - Investing in Canada's Future 2004-2005

Rural and Remote Health

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The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) is the Government of Canada's agency for health research. Through CIHR, the Government of Canada invested approximately $10.4 million in 2004-05 in research on rural and remote health across Canada.

The facts


Research finding solutions for rural and remote health


In the pipeline... Engaging northern communities in health research

Northern health researchers need to be closely linked with the communities where research takes place. CIHR is working to facilitate community-researcher linkages that are necessary for community-based health research in the North. The Northern Health Research Development Program is intended to help Canadian researchers develop and establish collaborations with communities and with researchers from other disciplines through one-time grants. These grants support researchers in building relationships and exploring new collaborative opportunities. The initiative will increase the quantity and quality of northern health research proposals to CIHR and other granting agencies while enhancing research expertise on health topics and issues relevant to Canada's north. A critical element of the program is the increased involvement by northern communities in research.

Five researchers have received funding through this program, including:

The researchers...

Dr. James Dosman: Building a rural and remote health research network

When Dr. James Dosman began his pioneering research on rural and remote health, he was a member of a very small club. Today, thanks primarily to his efforts, the club's membership has swelled.

Throughout his career, Dr. Dosman has focused on encouraging collaboration among researchers, organizing five international symposia dating back to 1977, focusing on specific issues affecting people living in rural and remote areas. He is now working on his sixth symposium, scheduled for October 2005 and focusing on linkages between rural and northern health research.

Dr. Dosman was also instrumental in the creation of the Canadian Rural Health Research Society in 1999. The Society provides a networking and capacity-building opportunity for researchers in the many different disciplines that encompass rural and remote health research in Canada, disciplines as varied as cellular biology and epidemiology.

"We need scientific depth and geographic breadth," says Dr. Dosman, who currently serves as the Society's vice-chair. To date, it is the only society that regularly brings together rural and remote health researchers in Canada to advance their field. Dr. Dosman is the Director of the Institute of Agricultural, Rural and Environmental Health, which conducts research, education, and health promotion programs aimed at enhancing the health and well-being of agricultural, rural and remote populations.

Last year, Dr. Dosman demonstrated for the first time that asthma could develop in newly employed full-time swine farm workers who experience only short-term exposure to the job - and that these respiratory problems could remain with them. Previous research indicated that respiratory problems such as asthma occurred among long-term employees - primarily due to endotoxins (toxins that deform normal cell structure).

Dr. Dosman is now concentrating his research on understanding the genetic components of endotoxins so that he may be able to develop new treatments for those who suffer from these kinds of respiratory ailments.The CIHR Strategic Initiative

Rural and remote health cuts across the mandates of all CIHR Institutes, from Aboriginal Peoples' Health to Population and Public Health. The Rural and Northern Health Research (RNHR) Initiative was first established in 2001 to advance research and knowledge translation that strengthen the health and health systems of Canadians living in rural and remote areas. In 2000-01, CIHR invested $733,054 in rural and remote health. By 2004-05, that had grown to more than $10 million. This is a reflection of the strategic importance of health research in rural and remote communities.

CIHR works with federal agencies and departments with an interest in rural and remote health research, including the Natural Science and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC), the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), Health Canada, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, and Statistics Canada. In addition, CIHR, NSERC and SSHRC work together as members of a Tri-Agency Working Group on Northern Research, which focuses on building research capacity in the North.

The CIHR Strategic Initiative

Rural and remote health cuts across the mandates of all CIHR Institutes, from Aboriginal Peoples' Health to Population and Public Health. The Rural and Northern Health Research (RNHR) Initiative was first established in 2001 to advance research and knowledge translation that strengthen the health and health systems of Canadians living in rural and remote areas. In 2000-01, CIHR invested $733,054 in rural and remote health. By 2004-05, that had grown to more than $10 million. This is a reflection of the strategic importance of health research in rural and remote communities.

CIHR works with federal agencies and departments with an interest in rural and remote health research, including the Natural Science and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC), the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), Health Canada, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, and Statistics Canada. In addition, CIHR, NSERC and SSHRC work together as members of a Tri-Agency Working Group on Northern Research, which focuses on building research capacity in the North.

About the Canadian Institutes of Health Research

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research is the Government of Canada's agency for health research. Its objective is to excel, according to internationally accepted standards of scientific excellence, in the creation of new knowledge and its translation into improved health for Canadians, more effective health services and products and a strengthened Canadian health care system. Composed of 13 Institutes, CIHR provides leadership and support to close to 10,000 researchers and trainees in every province of Canada.


Created: 2005-08-31
Modified: 2006-11-23
Reviewed: 2005-08-31
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