IHDCYH Institute Advisory Board Members – Biographies
Bernard Thébaud, MD, PhD (Chair)
Senior Scientist, Regenerative Medicine, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute & CHEO Research Institute
Neonatologist, Division of Neonatology, The Ottawa Hospital and the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario
Professor of Pediatrics, University of Ottawa
University of Ottawa Partnership Research Chair in Regenerative Medicine
Dr. Bernard Thébaud is a clinician-scientist with a focus on the clinical translation of stem cell-based and gene therapies for lung diseases. He is a senior scientist with the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute and a neonatologist with the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, providing care to critically ill newborns. He is also a Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Ottawa.
Dr. Thébaud obtained his MD at the University Louis Pasteur in France and trained in Pediatrics and Neonatology at the University Paris V, where he obtained his MSc and PhD, before completing a 2-year postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Alberta.
Dr. Thébaud studies the mechanisms of lung development, injury and repair to design new treatments for incurable lung diseases. His focus is on answering clinically relevant questions for translation into real-life applications. Over the next five years, his goal is to bring safe and effective cell and gene therapies for lung diseases into the clinic to improve patient outcomes.
Dr. Thébaud has participated on numerous peer review committees and scientific advisory boards at the international, national and provincial level, including CIHR and NIH. Dr. Thébaud holds the University of Ottawa Partnership Research Chair in Regenerative Medicine. His research is funded by a CIHR Foundation Scheme grant, the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, the Stem Cell Network and the Ontario Institute of Regenerative Medicine.
Kristin Connor (Vice-Chair)
Associate Professor, Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, Health Sciences, Carleton University
Dr. Kristin Connor is an Associate Professor of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease in the Department of Health Sciences at Carleton University. She is a molecular geneticist and nutritionist by first training (University of Guelph) and obtained her doctorate in reproductive and developmental physiology in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto, where she conducted her research internationally. She was a Research Fellow and Investigator at the Liggins Institute and the National Research Centre for Growth and Development in Auckland, New Zealand, and a senior Research Fellow at the Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto.
Dr. Connor has established a transdisciplinary and translational research programme (connorlab.ca) grounded in improving and supporting maternal, fetal, and child health. Her work seeks to understand maternal health and developmental trajectories in early life, and how these states are established and can be modified to influence an individual’s lifelong health resilience or disease risk. Her team’s research focuses on novel ways to predict individuals at-risk for adverse pregnancy outcomes, suboptimal development, and later chronic disease, and novel interventions to optimise maternal health and early developmental trajectories to reduce the incidence of adverse pregnancy outcomes, poor fetal/child growth, and chronic diseases in later life. Her work also seeks to close the evidence-practice gap by understanding how to improve implementation approaches and mobilise knowledge for health promotion, empowerment, and disease prevention. She is funded through national agencies including the CIHR, NSERC, and the Molly Towell Perinatal Research Foundation. Dr. Connor is a graduate of the Corporate Governance programme at the Wharton Business School, is an Associate Editor with the Journal of Developmental Origins of Health and Disease, and is a dedicated member of national and international scientific societies, including DOHaD and the Society for Reproductive Investigation (SRI), where she serves as an SRI Council Member and Chair of the Global Outreach committee. Dr. Connor is excited to contribute to the IHDCYH IAB.
Isabelle Boucoiran, MD, MSc
Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Université de Montréal
Co-director, Women and Children Infectious Disease Centre
Dr. Isabelle Boucoiran is Clinical Associate Professor at Université de Montréal (QC). She is a mid-career clinician-scientist at the School of Public Health and the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department of the CHU Sainte-Justine, where she is co-director of the Women and Children Infectious Disease Centre (CIME).
Her main area of research is the diagnosis, management, and prevention of infections in pregnancy. Her research expertise is at the crossroads of several fields, from basic science to epidemiology and public health. Her research program is funded by the Canadian Institutes for Health Research, the US National Institutes of Health, the “Fonds de Recherche du Québec – Santé” and the Quebec health ministry.
Carolyn Emery
Professor, Faculty of Kinesiology & Pediatrics & Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary
Chair, Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre
Carolyn Emery is a physiotherapist and injury epidemiologist. She is a Professor in the Faculty of Kinesiology and in Pediatrics and Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary. She is a Canada Research Chair (Tier 1) in Concussion and Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences and Royal Society of Canada. Carolyn is the Chair of the Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre (1 of 11 and the Canadian International Olympic Committee Research Centre for Prevention of Injury and Protection of Athlete Health) and is a member of the Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute, O’Brien Institute for Public Health, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health.
The focus of Carolyn’s research program is the prevention of injuries in youth sport, with a focus also on concussion and adapted physical activity and sport for children and adolescents with disabilities; aimed to reduce the public health burden of injuries and their long-term consequences. She aims to evaluate targets for injury and concussion across policy and rules, training strategies, and personal protective equipment and management/rehabilitation. Carolyn is best known for her research program in injury and concussion risk in youth ice hockey including evaluation of policy related to body checking. In addition, her research associated with the development and evaluation of prevention strategies to decrease the risk of injuries in youth team sports and junior high school physical education has led to a significant public health impact in injury reduction in youth sport.
In 2018, Carolyn was awarded a Canada Institutes for Health Research Foundation Grant (SHRed injuries – Surveillance in High Schools and Community Sport to Reduce Injuries and their Consequences in Youth). As nominated PI, her pan-Canadian multidisciplinary research team recently received significant funding from the National Football League Play Smart Play Safe Program for SHRed Concussions aimed to reduce the significant burden of concussions and their consequences in youth sport. Carolyn’s research priorities for moving upstream towards prevention to ensure the greatest public heath impact in reducing the burden of injuries and concussions and their consequences in youth. This includes the prevention of reduced levels of physical activity, overweight and obesity, early osteoarthritis, consequences of concussion, and chronic illness. Overarchingly, Carolyn aims to keep kids participating in the sports they love.
Ryan Giroux, MD
Pediatrician, St Michael’s Hospital
Dr. Ryan Giroux is an early career General Pediatrician at St. Michael’s Hospital and the Inner City Health Associates in Toronto. He works primarily with urban Indigenous children and families, along with refugee and newcomer children and families across Toronto and Scarborough. He is Métis from the Métis Nation of Alberta as well as mixed settler heritage, and grew up on Treaty 6 and 8 territory in his hometown of Athabasca, Alberta.
He is an Indigenous Educator at the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, the Temerty Faculty of Medicine’s Postgraduate Medical Education Indigenous Health Lead, the Co-Chair of the Canadian Paediatric Society’s First Nation, Inuit, and Metis Health Committee, and a board member of the Indigenous Physicians Association of Canada. He speaks routinely at the local, national, and international level in various spheres related to Indigenous child health and Indigenous medical education, and is the current Co-Chair of the International Meeting on Indigenous Child Health.
Rachel Martens
Bereaved Parent and Pediatric Knowledge Broker
Rae Martens is a bereaved parent from Calgary, Alberta and has had extensive experience within the pediatric healthcare system. She had the privilege of raising her son Luke who was born with a rare chromosome diagnosis for 14 years which made him medically complex. She has been a partner in health research for 10 years. She now uses that experience as a partner to work as a Knowledge Broker in pediatric health research. Mentoring people with lived experience and researchers through the process of building healthy partnerships. Rae's quite passionate about knowledge mobilization, complex community engagement ecosystems, crochet and coffee.
Alexa Martin-Storey
Professor, Department of Psychoeducation, Université de Sherbrooke
Alexa Martin-Storey is a professor in the department of Psychoeducation at the Université de Sherbrooke. Her work focuses on the factors by which stigma, and particularly gender-based stigma and resulting discrimination shapes health and psychosocial functioning among adolescents and young adults. She currently holds the Canada Research Chair in Stigma and Psychosocial Development.
Souvik Mitra, MD, MSc, PhD, FRCPC
Neonatologist, BC Women’s Hospital
Associate Professor of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia
Clinician-Scientist, BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute
Dr. Souvik Mitra is an Associate Professor of Pediatrics at the University of British Columbia and a Clinician-Scientist at the BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute, Vancouver, Canada. He completed his fellowship in Neonatal-Perinatal Medicine and MSc in Clinical Epidemiology from McMaster University and his PhD in Epidemiology and Applied Health Research from Dalhousie University.
His primary research interests revolve around improving patient and family-important clinical outcomes of extremely preterm babies. His current CIHR-funded research projects include a pan Canadian study on the comparative effectiveness of NSAIDs for treatment of patent ductus arteriosus in extremely preterm infants and a multicenter RCT on selective early treatment of the PDA in extremely low gestational age infants.
He is the Chair of the Fetus and Newborn Committee of the Canadian Pediatric Society, member of the Institute Advisory Board, Institute of Human Development, Child and Youth Health (IHDCYH) and the College of Reviewers, CIHR. He serves as an Associate Editor for the Cochrane Neonatal Group and co-chairs the Academic Committee of the Neonatal Hemodynamic Research Centre and the Evidence Based Practice for Improving Quality (EPIQ) Hemodynamic Group of the Canadian Neonatal Network.
Taylor Morriseau
DLSPH Indigenous Postdoctoral Fellow
University of Toronto/First Nations Health and Social Secretariat of Manitoba
PhD (Vanier Scholar), Pharmacology and Therapeutics, University of Manitoba
Dr. Morriseau (Peguis First Nation) is a postdoctoral fellow supported by the Waakebiness Institute for Indigenous Health at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health. She received her PhD from the University of Manitoba with a focus on gene-environment interactions underlying type 2 diabetes among First Nations youth. In her postdoctoral fellowship, she is working with an interdisciplinary team of academics and community partners within the First Nations Health and Social Secretariat of Manitoba (FNHSSM). Her research aims to support First Nations-led biomedical research by strengthening regional capacity for biobanking and data sovereignty initiatives.
She is committed to broader scientific and societal challenges encompassing Indigenous health, genomics, ethics, and science policy through advisory positions with the Chief Science Advisor of Canada, Research Canada, and the Native BioData Consortium (NBDC). She has been a recipient of the WXN Canada’s Most Powerful Women Top 100 Award, a Manitoba 150 Women Trailblazer Award, and a University of Manitoba Distinguished Young Alumni Award.
Michael Rieder
Professor, Departments of Paediatrics, Physiology, Pharmacology and Medicine, Western University
Scientist, Robarts Research Institute
Dr. Rieder obtained his MD at the University of Saskatchewan in 1980 and Ph.D. at the University of Toronto in 1992. His paediatric residency training was at Children's Hospital of Michigan followed by fellowships in Paediatric Emergency Medicine and Clinical Pharmacology at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. He is a Distinguished University Professor in the Departments of Paediatrics, Physiology and Pharmacology and Medicine at Western University and a Scientist at the Robarts Research Institute. He is a member of the Drug Therapy Committee of the CPS and has served as a consultant to Health Canada, the NIH, the MRC and the Council of Canadian Academies. Dr. Rieder's research focuses on drug and food safety and optimal therapeutics in children. His work is supported by Genome Canada, CIHR and NSERC. Dr. Rieder has published 4 books, 33 book chapters and over 300 peer-reviewed manuscripts and has trained more than 50 fellows and graduate students. His work has resulted in the creation of two new Canadian companies. He received many awards including the 1994 and 1996 Young Investigator of the Year for the Canadian and American Societies of Clinical Pharmacology, Senior Investigator Award of the Canadian Society of Clinical Pharmacology, the Academic Leadership Award in Clinical Investigation from the Paediatric Chairs of Canada, the Sumner Yaffe Lifetime Achievement Award for Pediatric Pharmacotherapy and Fellowships from the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences and the British Pharmacology Society. He holds the CIHR-GSK Chair in Paediatric Clinical Pharmacology, the only endowed Chair in Paediatric Clinical Pharmacology in Canada and has served as President of the Canadian Society of Pharmacology and Therapeutics.
Bukola (Oladunni) Salami, RN, MN, PhD
Professor and Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Black and Racialized Peoples' Health, Cumming School of Medicine
University of Calgary
Professor Bukola Salami is a Registered Nurse, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Black and Racialized People’s Health and a Full Professor in the Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary. She previously held the rank of Full Professor in the Faculty of Nursing and was Director of the Intersections of Gender Signature Area in the Office of the Vice President Research, both at the University of Alberta. She received her Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the University of Windsor and her Master of Nursing and PhD in Nursing from the University of Toronto. Professor Salami’s research program focuses on the well-being of Black, immigrant, and racialized people. She has been involved in over 90 funded studies totalling over $230 million. She recently received a $2.5 million SSHRC Partnership Grant titled Transforming the Lives of Black Children and Youth in Canada. She founded and leads the African Child and Youth Migration Network, a network of 42 scholars from four continents. In 2020, she founded the Black Youth Mentorship and Leadership Program, the first university-based fully interdisciplinary mentorship program for Black youths in Western Canada. This program seeks to socially and economically empower Black high school youths to meaningfully contribute to Canadian society. Her work on Black youth mental health informed the creation of the first mental health clinic for Black Canadians in Western Canada (which was founded by Africa Centre and the Alberta Black Therapist Network). She has presented her work to policy makers (including the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health). She has trained over 100 undergraduate and graduate students, including many (~10) who are now Assistant or Associate Professors. Professor Salami is Vice President of the Canadian Nurses Association and board member of Black Opportunity Fund. In addition to being an Editor for the Canadian Journal of Nursing Research and on the Editorial Board of Nursing Inquiry, Nursing Philosophy, and Qualitative Health Research. She is a board/council member of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, an advisory board member of the CIHR Institute for Human Development, Child and Youth Health, and on the Scientific Advisory Committee on Global Health to the Government of Canada.
Dr. Salami has received several awards for research excellence and community engagement: 100 Accomplished Black Women in Canada; Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing Emerging Nurse Researcher of the Year Award; College and Association of Registered Nurses of Alberta (CARNA) Award for Nursing Excellence; Rosalind Smith Professional Award from the National Black Coalition of Canada – Edmonton Chapter; Alberta Avenue Edmonton Top 40 under 40; Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society International Nurse Researcher Hall of Fame; Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Nursing; Killam Accelerator Award (a $225,000 value for research); Top 25 Canadian Immigrants; Queen Elizabeth II Platinum Jubilee Medal; Health Research Foundation Equity, Diversity and Inclusion Award; and Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing.
Keiko Shikako
Canada Research Chair in Childhood Disability: Participation and Knowledge Translation
Associate Professor, McGill University School of Physical and Occupational Therapy
Dr Shikako's research focuses on the promotion of healthy living and the human rights of children with disabilities, and knowledge translation science and practice. Her research program adopts a participatory approach to engage different interested parties, including policymakers, community organizations, youth and their families in finding solutions to change the environment, inform policymaking and promote the participation of children with disabilities in different life roles and activities. She leads several knowledge translation initiatives, including the Jooay App, the CHILD-BRIGHT SPOR KM Program, and is part of the civil society groups reporting to the UN on the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, and the Accessible Standards Canada Technical Committee on Outdoor Spaces.
Current research projects include the Jooay App; the Knowledge Mobilization program at the CHILD-BRIGHT SPOR; the childhood disability Policy Hub; the WHO Global report on developmental disabilities and delays; the CHILD: Canadian Health Indicators for Children with Disabilities, and the Beyond Convention: How is the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Person with Disabilities working for Persons with Disabilities in Canada?
Padmaja Subbarao, MD,MSc
CRC (Tier 1) Pediatric Asthma and Lung Health & Professor of Pediatrics, Physiology and Dalla Lana School of Public Health
Associate Chief, Clinical Research and Co-Lead of Precision Health Initiative, Hospital for Sick Children
Director, CHILD Study
Dr. Subbarao is a Clinician-Scientist in the Division of Respirology at The Hospital for Sick Children and holds a CRC Tier 1 Chair in Pediatric Asthma and Lung Health at the University of Toronto. Trained in both Epidemiology and infant and preschool lung function, she is a Professor in the Departments of Pediatrics, Physiology and Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto. Dr. Subbarao is an international leader in lung function and asthma, co-authoring clinical practice guidelines and position statements. She serves on advisory boards to the NIH for asthma cohort studies.
Dr. Subbarao’s research program focuses on disentangling preschool wheeze heterogeneity to precisely predict who will develop each type of asthma, monitor its progression and discover the underlying biology associated with each asthma subtype. She is the Director of the CHILD study, one of the largest, most intensively characterized asthma birth cohorts in the world. This world-leading study enabled the discovery of the importance of the gut microbiome for the protection against asthma. She also established the first infant lung function laboratory in Canada. Her research in early life lung function as a biomarker and identification of risk factors in asthma have enabled the earlier, precise prediction and monitoring of its progression, thus advancing the diagnosis and treatment of children with asthma.
Dr. Subbarao was appointed Co-Lead of the Precision Child Health Initiative in 2020, and in 2021 she was appointed Associate Chief, Clinical Research at the Hospital for Sick Children. In these roles, she is helping transform SickKids into a learning health system. This is a critical step in our movement to shift toward pediatric healthcare that integrates an individual’s biological, environmental and patient reported data and harness emerging discoveries to predict better, diagnose faster and treat smarter.
Yao Zheng
Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Alberta
Dr. Yao Zheng is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Alberta in the Developmental Science area. He was previously a Postdoctoral Fellow at Simon Fraser University and University of Quebec at Montreal. He received is Ph.D. and M.S. in Human Development and Family Studies, as well as a M.A.S. in Applied Statistics, from the Pennsylvania State University. He received his B.S. in Psychology from Yuan Pei Honors College, Peking University. During graduate school, he also visited the Department of Developmental Psychology at Friedrich-Schiller University Jena and the Social, Genetic, & Developmental Psychiatry Center at King’s College London as a visiting graduate student.
Guided by a developmental psychopathology approach, Dr. Zheng’s research focuses on the development and prevention of child and adolescent behavioral and emotional problems with the ultimate goal of informing intervention to promote physical and mental well-being. Specifically, as a lifespan developmental researcher, he investigates the influences of family and peer processes that shape normal and atypical development at multiple levels of analysis (e.g., genetic, psychological, behavioral) and timescales (e.g., days, years) in various ecological contexts (e.g., family, culture). He is particularly interested in how children and adolescents from at-risk or ethnic/racial minority populations can prosper and show resilience despite adverse experiences.
- Date modified: