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Le Comité consultatif provincial des maladies infectieuses (CCPMI) regroupe des intervenants possédant un haut niveau d’expertise dans des secteurs pertinents du domaine de la santé en Ontario, y compris des spécialistes respectés des maladies infectieuses, de la prévention et du contrôle des infections, de l’épidémiologie, de la santé publique, de la santé et la sécurité au travail, de la médecine de laboratoire et de la médecine vétérinaire.
SPO a formé les cinq comités suivants pour appuyer les fonctions du CCPMI au sein de l’organisme :
- Comité de coordination du CCPMI
- CCPMI – prévention et contrôle des infections
- CCPMI – maladies transmissibles
- CCPMI – surveillance
- CCPMI – immunisation
Le Comité de coordination orientera et coordonnera les activités du CCPMI au sein de SPO et dans l’ensemble des comités consultatifs.
Les quatre comités consultatifs fourniront des conseils d’experts, mettront au point des produits de connaissance fondés sur des éléments probants et formuleront des conseils sur une variété de questions pour aider SPO à fournir des conseils scientifiques et techniques aux intervenants sur le terrain chargés de protéger et de promouvoir la santé des Ontariennes et Ontariens, comme le stipule son mandat.
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Comité de coordination du CCPMI
Coprésidents
- Dr George Pasut, vice-président, sciences et santé publique, SPO
- Dr Dick Zoutman, professeur et président, divisions de la microbiologie médicale et des maladies infectieuses, Université Queen’s
Membres
- Nina Arron, directrice, Direction de la protection de la santé publique et de la prévention, Division de la santé publique, ministère de la Santé et des Soins de longue durée (MSSLD)
- Sandra Callery, directrice, prévention et contrôle des infections, Centre Sunnybrook des sciences de la santé, professeure adjointe en clinique, faculté des sciences de la santé, Université McMaster
- Dre Natasha Crowcroft, directrice, surveillance et épidémiologie, SPO
- Dre Eileen de Villa, médecin hygiéniste adjointe, Région de Peel
- Dr Ian Gemmill, médecin hygiéniste, Kingston, Bureau de santé de Frontenac et Lennox et Addington, professeur agrégé, département de santé communautaire et d’épidémiologie, département de médecine familiale, directeur, programme de résidence en médecine communautaire, Université Queen’s
- Dr Doug Sider, directeur intérimaire, prévention et contrôle des maladies infectieuses, SPO, professeur adjoint, Université McMaster
- Dre Mary Vearncombe, directrice médicale, prévention et contrôle des infections, Centre Sunnybrook des sciences de la santé, professeure agrégée, département de pathologie et de médecine de laboratoire, faculté de médecine, Université de Toronto
- Vacants, médecin hygiéniste en chef adjoint, Protection de la santé publique et prévention, Division de la santé publique, ministère de la Santé et des Soins de longue durée (MSSLD)
CCPMI – Prévention et contrôle des infections
Présidente
- Dre Mary Vearncombe, directrice médicale, prévention et contrôle des infections, Centre Sunnybrook des sciences de la santé, professeure agrégée, département de pathologie et de médecine de laboratoire, faculté de médecine, Université de Toronto
Responsable, questions scientifiques
- Liz Van Horne, chef des ressources en prévention et contrôle des infections
Membres
- Dre Irene Armstrong, médecin hygiéniste adjointe, contrôle des maladies transmissibles, Toronto Public Health, professeure auxiliaire, école de santé publique Dalla Lana, Université de Toronto
- Donna Baker, chef des services généraux, prévention et contrôle des infections, ACO Health Service
- Mary Lou Card, chef, prévention et contrôle des infections, London Health Sciences Centre et centre des soins de santé St. Joseph’s
- Judy Dennis, chef, prévention et contrôle des infections, Centre hospitalier pour enfants de l’est de l’Ontario
- Dr Kevin Katz, directeur médical, programme de prévention et de contrôle des infections, hôpital général de North York, coordonnateur des services médicaux, Réseau de contrôle des infections de la région du Centre, professeur adjoint, département de pathologie et de médecine de laboratoire, Université de Toronto
- Dre Allison McGeer, microbiologiste et conseillère en matière de maladies infectieuses, directrice, prévention et contrôle des infections, directrice, programme de recherche en épidémiologie des maladies infectieuses, hôpital Mount Sinai
- Dre Kathryn Suh, directrice associée, programme de prévention et de contrôle des infections, L’Hôpital d’Ottawa, professeure agrégée de médecine, Université d’Ottawa
- Dr Dick Zoutman, professeur et président, divisions de la microbiologie médicale et des maladies infectieuses, Université Queen’s
Membres d’office
- Dr Leon Genesove, médecin provincial, ministère du Travail de l’Ontario
- Jessica Anne Lapensee, conseillère en santé environnementale, ministère de la Santé et des Soins de longue durée (MSSLD)
- Pat Piaskowski, coordonnatrice de réseau, Réseau régional du contrôle des infections du Nord-Ouest
- Dr Doug Sider, directeur intérimaire, prévention et contrôle des maladies infectieuses, SPO, professeur adjoint, Université McMaster
CCPMI – Maladies transmissibles
Présidente
Responsable, questions scientifiques
- Dr Colin Lee, médecin de santé publique, SPO et médecin hygiéniste adjoint, Bureau de santé du district de Simcoe Muskoka
- Dr Doug Sider, directeur intérimaire, prévention et contrôle des maladies infectieuses, SPO, professeur adjoint, Université McMaster
Membres
- Dre Margaret Fearon, directrice médicale exécutive, Microbiologie médicale, Société canadienne du sang, professeure adjointe, département de pathobiologie et de médecine de laboratoire, Université de Toronto
- Dre Martha Fulford, spécialiste des maladies infectieuses, professeure adjointe en clinique, centre médical de l’Université McMaster
- Dr Gary Garber, chef des maladies infectieuses, vice-président, département de médecine, membre, division des maladies infectieuses, professeur, département de médecine et département de biochimie, de microbiologie et d’immunologie, L’Hôpital d’Ottawa
- Heather Hague, chef, programme de prévention des maladies infectieuses, services de santé de la région du Niagara
- Dr Ian Kitai, médecin, spécialiste de la tuberculose, division des maladies infectieuses, The Hospital for Sick Children, professeur agrégé, département de pédiatrie, Université de Toronto
- Lee Sieswerda, épidémiologiste, Bureau de santé du district de Thunder Bay, professeur adjoint, santé publique, École de médecine du Nord de l’Ontario, programme de santé publique, Université Lakehead
- Dre Barbara Yaffe, directrice, contrôle des maladies transmissibles, médecin hygiéniste adjointe, Toronto Public Health, professeure adjointe, département des sciences de la santé publique, Université de Toronto
Membres d’office
- Nadeen Bailey, coordonnatrice de réseau, Réseau régional du contrôle des infections de Waterloo Wellington
- Dr Doug Sider, directeur intérimaire, prévention et contrôle des maladies infectieuses, SPO, professeur adjoint, Université McMaster
- Dr Lillian Wong, conseillère médicale principale, Unité des soins de santé et de la médecine du travail, ministère du Travail
CCPMI - Surveillance
Présidente
- Sandra Callery, directrice, prévention et contrôle des infections, Centre Sunnybrook des sciences de la santé, professeure adjointe en clinique, Faculté des sciences de la santé, Université McMaster
Responsable, questions scientifiques
- Anne-Luise Winter, épidémiologiste principale, SPO
Membres
- Effie Gournis, chef, unité de surveillance des maladies transmissibles, Toronto Public Health, professeure adjointe, école de santé publique Dalla Lana, Université de Toronto
- Faron Kolbe, chef, informatique et santé, programme de lutte contre les maladies transmissibles, Toronto Public Health
- Dr Chris O’Callaghan, coordonnateur de projet, Institut national du cancer du Canada, groupe des essais cliniques, professeur adjoint, Université Queen’s
- Dr Dick Zoutman, professeur et président, divisions de la microbiologie médicale et des maladies infectieuses, Université Queen’s
Membres d’office
- Dre Natasha Crowcroft, directrice, surveillance et épidémiologie, SPO
- Colleen Nisbet, coordonnatrice de réseau, Réseau de contrôle des infections de Simcoe-nord Muskoka
CCPMI - Immunisation
Président
- Dr Ian Gemmill, médecin hygiéniste, Kingston, Bureau de santé de Frontenac et Lennox et Addington, professeur agrégé, département de santé communautaire et d’épidémiologie, département de médecine familiale, directeur, programme de résidence en médecine communautaire, Université Queen’s
Responsable, questions scientifiques
- Shelley Deeks, épidémiologiste médicale, surveillance et épidémiologie, SPO
Membres
- Mary Anne Carson, chef, services de lutte contre les maladies transmissibles, Halton Regional Health Department
- Dr Nicole Le Saux, professeure agrégée, Faculté de médecine, Université d’Ottawa, médecin spécialiste des maladies infectieuses, directrice médicale, prévention et contrôle des infections, Centre hospitalier pour enfants de l’est de l’Ontario
- Dre Bryna Warshawsky, médecin hygiéniste adjointe, directrice, services de santé sexuelle et de lutte contre les maladies transmissibles, Bureau de santé de Middlesex-London
Membres d’office
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Dr. Irene Armstrong
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control member |
Irene Armstrong is a community medicine specialist who has been working in Communicable Disease Control at Toronto Public Health since 2005. Currently, she is the associate medical officer of health for the Communicable Disease Liaison Unit and an adjunct professor in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto.
Armstrong is also an OMA representative on the OHA Communicable Disease Surveillance Protocols Committee.
Nina Arron
CCPMI Coordinating Committee member |
Nina Arron is director, Public Health Policy and Programs Branch in the Public Health Division at the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. Prior to joining the Public Health Division in June 2009, she served as acting executive director at the Centre for Communicable Diseases and Infection Control in the Infectious Disease and Emergency Preparedness Branch at the Public Health Agency of Canada, serving as the national focal point for federal government action on HIV and AIDS.
Arron has a bachelor of science in nursing (public health) and graduate preparation in health administration. She has extensive health program and policy experience at the federal level in the areas of aging and seniors, health system renewal, primary care and environmental health. She has rounded out her experience in the community, as director of a community health centre and has held progressive clinical and management positions within the acute care delivery system.
Arron has taught and coordinated curriculum development at Algonquin College and the Ottawa University and is currently serving as the provincial health co-chair on the Federal/Provincial/Territorial Food Safety Committee.
Donna Baker
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control member |
Donna Baker is corporate manager of infection prevention and control at ACO Health Service.
Sandra Callery
CCPMI Coordinating Committee member
CCPMI - Surveillance chair |
Sandra Callery has worked in the field of infection prevention and control for many years. Her other work experiences include clinical research and occupational health and safety. She has worked in a variety of health care settings, including public health, small community hospitals and large tertiary care centres.
Callery is a registered nurse and holds a master of health sciences (health care practice) where her research focused on HIV infection, counselling and testing. She has participated in research and Rapports regarding disease transmission and management of patients with antibiotic resistant organisms.
Callery is a past national president of the Community and Hospital Infection Control Association of Canada (CHICA Canada) and has participated in national committees such as the National Advisory Committee on Immunization and the National Pandemic Influenza Planning Committee. She continues to participate in international infection control initiatives through CHICA Canada.
Callery is a faculty member for the Centennial College Course for Infection Prevention and Control and is an assistant clinical professor at McMaster University for the Faculty of Health Sciences. Currently she is the director of Infection Prevention and Control at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.
Mary Lou Card
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control member |
Mary Lou Card is the manager of Infection Prevention and Control at London Health Sciences and St. Joseph's Health Care Centre. She has been an infection control practitioner for over 20 years, is a registered nurse and is certified in Infection Control (CIC).
Mary Anne Carson
CCPMI - Immunization member |
Mary Anne Carson is a registered nurse with a bachelor of science in nursing from McMaster University. She has spent more than 25 years of nursing career in public health with the majority of the time spent in the immunization and communicable disease control area.
Carson has recently retired from her position as the manager of Communicable Disease Control Services for Halton Region Health Department, a position she has held for 13 years.
Dr. Natasha Crowcroft
CCPMI Coordinating Committee member
CCPMI - Surveillance ex-officio member
CCPMI - Immunization ex-officio member
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Natasha Crowcroft has a bachelor of medicine, bachelor of surgery and master of science from the University of London, post graduate specialist qualifications in internal medicine and public health (Membership of the Royal College of Physicians [MRCP] and Fellow of the Faulty of Public Health [FFPH]), and a medical doctorate from the University of Cambridge.
Crowcroft has worked internationally in several European programs and as adviser to the World Health Organization (WHO) on methods of estimating global burden of pertussis and neonatal tetanus. She was the first person selected to represent the United Kingdom (UK) in the European Programme for Intervention Epidemiology Training (EPIET) and is the founding president of the EPIET Alumni Network (EAN), which links public health epidemiologists across Europe.
While working in Belgium from 1995 to 1997, Crowcroft undertook one of the first cross border Projets completed between Belgium and France, a study of hantavirus infections. After this, she worked for a decade in the Immunisation Department of the Health Protection Agency’s Centre for Infections as a national expert in vaccines, leading on surveillance of a number of diseases including diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis as well as vaccination coverage. She has also led incident responses to Lassa fever, pioneered immunization training initiatives and has research interests in encephalitis and vaccine program evaluation. She is a member of the Canadian National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI).
Dr. Eileen de Villa
CCPMI Coordinating Committee member
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases chair |
Eileen de Villa is an associate medical officer of health for the Region of Peel. After completing her undergraduate degree at McGill University, she continued her Études at the University of Toronto where she completed both her master of health science in 1994 and her medical degree in 1998. She became a certificant of the College of Family Physicians of Canada in 2000 and practiced family medicine on a part-time basis from 2000 to 2003 at a community health center in Toronto. She became a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Canada in 2004, specializing in community medicine. She also completed her master's of business administration at the Schulich School of Business in 2003.
Since joining Peel Public Health in 2004, she has worked primarily with the communicable diseases and environmental health divisions, providing technical support and medical expertise to public health staff in the management of cases and infectious diseases outbreaks.
Judy Dennis
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control member |
Judy Dennis is the manager of Infection Prevention and Control at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO). She is a registered respiratory therapist. Prior to her career in infection control, she worked for 18 years as a member of the Neonatal Transport Team at CHEO and for eight years as manager for Respiratory Therapy at CHEO.
Dennis has served as an executive member of the College of Respiratory Therapy from 2003 to 2008, treasurer for Community Hospital Infection Control Association (CHICA) Ottawa Region (COR) from 2008 to 2010 and is currently president elect for COR. She maintains her certification in infection control (CIC) and is currently completing a degree in hospital administration.
Dr. Margaret Fearon
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases member |
Margaret Fearon joined Canadian Blood Services as executive medical director, Medical Microbiology in June 2004. She is assistant professor in the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology at the University of Toronto. She was president of the Canadian Association for Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (CACMID) in 2005/2006.
Fearon did her medical training at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, and a fellowship in medical microbiology at the University of Toronto. She worked as an associate staff member in the Department of Microbiology at the Hospital for Sick Children from 1988 to 1991, when she took the position of medical microbiologist at the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care in the Laboratories Branch from 1991 to 2004.
Fearon is a current member and former chair of the Virology Committee at Quality Management Programme-Laboratory Services and is a member of the National West Nile Steering Committee, and the Canadian Public Health Lab Network. She has participated in the national, provincial and City of Toronto pandemic influenza planning committees. She is a member of the Canadian Society for Transfusion Medicine and the American Association of Blood Banks.
Dr. Martha Fulford
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases member |
Martha Fulford is an infectious diseases specialist and assistant clinical professor at McMaster University Medical Centre in Hamilton.
Dr. Gary Garber
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases member |
Gary Garber is a deputy chair of the Department of Medicine, responsible for patient quality and saferty and is a member of the Division of Infectious Diseases in the Department of Medicine at the University of Ottawa and the Ottawa Hospital. Garber is a professor in the Department of Medicine and of Biochemistry Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Ottawa and was also the chairman of the University of Ottawa Medical Associates, the academic practice plan for approximately 200 internists for over 11 years. He is currently vice-chair of patient quality relations within the Department of Medicine.
Garber received a doctorate of medicine from the University of Calgary and did his internal medicine training at the University of Toronto and infectious disease training and Medical Research Council of Canada (MRC) fellowship at the University of British Columbia. He is a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, the American College of Physicians and the Infectious Disease Society of America. Garber is a previous president of the Canadian Infectious Disease Society, a founder of the Canadian Association for HIV Research, was a founding director of the Ontario HIV Treatment Network and a member of the American Society for Microbiology. He is a leader in establishing a regional infection control program for the Champlain Region of Eastern Ontario and is also on the City of Ottawa Steering Committee for Pandemic Influenza Planning. He is currently developing an Antimicrobial Stewardship Program at the Ottawa Hospital.
With over 300 papers and abstracts, Garber's research interests include the appropriate use of antibiotics and evaluating novel antibiotics and antifungal agents in nosocomial infection (pneumonia, neutropenia, sepsis) and viral hepatitis. His laboratory Études the pathogenesis of Trichomonas vaginalis, a sexually transmitted vaginal infection, as well as the mechanisms of Septic Shock.
Dr. Ian M. Gemmill
CCPMI - Coordinating Committee member
CCPMI - Immunization chair |
Ian Gemmill has been the medical officer of health for Kingston, Frontenac and Lennox & Addington Public Health since 1997. Previously, he was the associate medical officer of health for the Ottawa-Carleton Health Department from 1981 to 1997 and was director of the Ottawa-Carleton Health Department (OCHD) Sexual Health Clinic. He is a graduate of the Faculty of Medicine at Queen’s University, a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in Community Medicine and an honorary life member of the Canadian Public Health Association.
Gemmill has 29 years of experience in public health in Ontario and has a strong interest in communicable diseases, immunization, sexually transmitted diseases, sexual health and tobacco use control. He is past chair of the Canadian Coalition for Immunization Awareness & Promotion (CCIAP). He has served on a number of other national and provincial committees on communicable diseases and immunization, including the National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) from 1996 to 2003, the Board of the National Cancer Institute of Canada from 2007 to 2009 and the Conseil d'administration of the Canadian Public Health Association.
Gemmill is an associate professor in the Departments of Community Health & Epidemiology and of Family Medicine at Queen’s University, and is currently director of the Community Medicine Residency Programme at Queen’s University in Kingston.
Effie Gournis
CCPMI - Surveillance member |
Effie Gournis currently manages Toronto Public Health’s Communicable Disease Surveillance Unit, where she develops and applies epidemiologic methods to monitor and investigate communicable disease activity in Toronto.
Gournis has a master’s of public health in infectious disease epidemiology from Yale University’s School of Medicine and a master’s of science in zoology from the University of Toronto.
Gournis has worked in TB epidemiology with San Francisco’s Department of Public Health, malaria control and prevention with the Pasteur Institute, food-borne illness surveillance with the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, and as an HIV/AIDS advisor for an advocacy program in New York State. She currently holds an assistant professor appointment with the Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto.
Heather Hague
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases member |
Heather Hague is a registered nurse who graduated from the Wellesley Hospital School of Nursing. She holds a master of education in integrated Études where her research focused on nurses and learning in a public health domain. She holds a bachelor of arts degree in health Études from Brock University.
Hague is a past president of the Hamilton and Neighbouring Districts Infection Control (HANDIC), and was on the Community and Hospital Infection Control Association of Canada (CHICA-Canada) Conseil d'administration from 1988 to 1991. She has been certified in infection prevention and control since 1985.
Hague has worked in the field of infection prevention and control for many years. Her other work experience includes a variety of health settings, small and medium sized community hospitals, and public health. Currently, she is the manager of the Infection Disease Program at Niagara Region Public Health.
Dr. Kevin Katz
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control member |
Kevin Katz is the medical director of Infection Prevention and Control at North York General Hospital, and medical coordinator of the Central Region Infection Control Network. He is a medical microbiologist and infectious diseases specialist and an assistant professor in the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology at the University of Toronto.
Katz’s special research interests include healthcare-acquired infections and multidrug resistant organisms. His research Rapports focus primarily on Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), including optimal laboratory detection, body site colonization, and the emergence of community-associated MRSA.
Dr. Ian Kitai
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases member |
Ian Kitai trained in medicine in South Africa, in pediatrics in the United Kingdom (UK) and Canada, and in pediatric infectious diseases in Toronto. He worked for three years in rural Zimbabwe for Oxfam UK and for two years in Northern Manitoba with the Northern Medical Unit of the University of Manitoba.
Since 1997, Kitai has been the TB specialist at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto and a staff member in the Division of Infectious Diseases. From 2003, he also served as medical consultant to the Infection Control Department at the Rouge Valley Health System (RVHS).
In 2004, Kitai received the Council Award from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario in part for his work at RVHS during SARS. He has a consulting practice in pediatrics and infectious diseases in Ajax, and is a member of Department of Pediatrics at the RVHS. He is an associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Toronto.
Faron Kolbe
CCPMI - Surveillance member |
Faron Kolbe is the manager of Health Informatics in the Communicable Disease Control Program at Toronto Public Health. He has worked in the public health field since 1990. Kolbe is a certified public health inspector and epidemiologist. He graduated from McMaster University, Faculty of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics in 1998 with a master's of science in health research methodology and completed his bachelor of applied science in environmental health from Ryerson University in 1991.
Kolbe has had extensive experience in large scale infectious disease outbreak response in the City of Toronto including SARS, Legionnaires’ disease and H1N1. He also has considerable experience in the development, implementation and management of public health information systems used to collect, analyze and translate data into information that supports disease surveillance, management and public health response.
Kolbe is a member of the Public Health Agency of Canada’s Canadian Institutes of Health Research Influenza Research Network (PCIRN) vaccine coverage theme group that is accessing methodologies for improving vaccine coverage.
Dr. Nicole Le Saux
CCPMI - Immunization member |
Nicole Le Saux is an associate professor in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Ottawa and an infectious diseases physician and medical director of Infection Prevention and Control at the Ottawa Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario.
Le Saux is certified in internal medicine, infectious diseases and pathology. She has been a member of Immunization Monitoring Program ACTIVE (IMPACT) since 2002 and is a member of the Canadian Pediatric Society Infectious Diseases Committee.
Le Saux is an investigator on the burden of rotavirus disease in Canadian children, conducting surveillance of rotavirus infections in hospitalized patients. She recently co-authored an economic analysis of rotavirus implementation in Canada.
In addition to being a passionate clinician, Le Saux’s research interests also include: uptake of influenza vaccine, community acquired MRSA infections and meningococcal disease.
Dr. Allison McGreer
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control member |
Allison McGeer trained in internal medicine and infectious diseases at the University of Toronto, then completed a fellowship in hospital epidemiology at Yale New Haven Hospital from 1989 to 1990. She has been involved in pandemic influenza planning at international, national, provincial, regional and local levels.
McGreer is currently a member of the Infectious Diseases Society of America Guideline Expert Advisory Group on Antivirals for Influenza. Her areas of research interest are the epidemiology of influenza infection, the prevention of health care associated infection, and adult immunization. She has current research funding from, among others, the United States National Institutes of Health, the United Kingdom Health Protection Agency, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Canadian Patient Safety Institute.
Dr. Chris O'Callaghan
CCPMI - Surveillance member |
Chris O'Callaghan received his doctorate of veterinary medicine degree from the University of Guelph. After two years in mixed-animal practice, he returned to undertake research in tropical veterinary medicine. Supported by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), he completed a preliminary assessment of the epidemiology of tick-borne diseases on smallholder dairy farms in the central Kenyan highlands. This work formed the basis of his master's of science in veterinary epidemiology. He was awarded a Medical Research Council of Canada (MRC) fellowship to continue his research and training and returned to the smallholder farms of Kenya to complete a year long study of the epidemiology of Theileriosis, conducting laboratory analyses at the International Laboratory for Research on Animal Diseases (ILRAD) in Nairobi.
In 1994, O'Callaghan joined the Ecology & Epidemiology Group of the University of Warwick as a visiting researcher to undertake further training in analytical methods and mathematical modelling of infectious diseases, and became a member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons the same year.
Under a United States Agency for International Development (USAID) funded project, O'Callaghan expanded his research on tick-borne diseases to include Heartwater in Zimbabwe and was appointed a joint University of Warwick/International Livestock Research Institute Research fellow. After completing his PhD in analytical epidemiology and becoming a British citizen, he accepted a Wellcome Trust Research Fellowship and was promoted to senior research fellow.
In 2000, O'Callaghan was seconded to Queen's University as an adjunct professor. He accepted a position as assistant professor and joined the National Cancer Institute of Canada Clinical Trials Group, where, in addition to his duties as project co-coordinator, he continues his research on the epidemiology of tick-borne diseases of human and livestock.
Dr. George Pasut
CCPMI Coordinating Committee co-chair |
As a member of the Executive Committee, George Pasut provides senior leadership to PHO in the further development and implementation of the strategic plan. Pasut oversees the operational portfolios involved with the delivery of scientific and public health programs within Surveillance et épidémiologie, Prévention et contrôle des maladies infectieuses, Promotion de la santé et prévention des maladies chroniques et des traumatismes, and Santé de l’environnement et du milieu du travail.
Pasut has extensive public health leadership experience, having served as associate chief medical officer of health, Public Health System Policy and Planning, Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care; medical officer of health and chief executive officer of the Simcoe County Health Unit; and as a senior medical consultant and physician manager in the Public Health Branch and as acting director of the Health Promotion branch of the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care. Most recently, Pasut was at Cancer Care Ontario where he was vice-president of Prevention and Screening.
Dr. Doug Sider
CCPMI Coordinating Committee member
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control ex-officio
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases co-scientific lead
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases ex-officio
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Doug Sider leads PHO’s team of infectious disease control specialists to develop and enhance provincial capacity in infection and communicable disease prevention and control.
Sider joined PHO as a public health physician for Prévention et contrôle des maladies infectieuses in September, 2009. As the lead for public health measures on our pandemic H1N1 Scientific Response Team, Sider was instrumental in developing public health Lignes directrices to support pandemic management. He has since led PHO’s Scientific Response Team for the G8-G20 Summit. Currently, he is co-principal investigator for a research study into the challenges of implementing Lignes directrices in school-based settings during the second wave of pandemic H1N1.
As a former medical officer of health and associate medical officer of health in Ontario and an assistant professor at McMaster University, Sider has a wealth of experience in public health practice in Ontario and abroad, extensive content knowledge, and a genuine desire to enhance the skills of Prévention et contrôle des maladies infectieuses specialists across the province.
Lee Sieswerda
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases member |
Lee Sieswerda has a master’s degree in epidemiology from the University of Alberta. He has been epidemiologist at the Thunder Bay District Health Unit since 2001. He is also assistant professor of public health at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine and in the Public Health Program at Lakehead University, where he teaches applied epidemiology. He is currently chair of the Pandemic Influenza Surveillance Committee for the District of Thunder Bay and a member of the Ontario Hepatitis C Task Force.
Sieswerda’s main interests are the application of epidemiological methods to practical public health problems as well as infectious disease and outbreak epidemiology.
Dr. Kathryn Suh
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control member |
Kathryn Suh is the associate director of Infection Prevention and Control at the Ottawa Hospital. Prior to her appointment at the Ottawa Hospital, she was the director of Infection Prevention and Control at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario in Ottawa.
Suh is certified by the Certification Board of Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc. (CIC), has her medical doctorate and is a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Canada. Suh is also an infectious diseases physician at the Ottawa Hospital and an associate professor of medicine at the University of Ottawa.
Dr. Mary Vearncombe
CCPMI Coordinating Committee member
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control chair |
Mary Vearncombe is a medical microbiologist and is medical director of Infection Prevention and Control at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. She is an associate professor in the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology of the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto.
Vearncombe is chair of the OHA/OMA Joint Committee for Development of Communicable Disease Surveillance Protocols for Ontario Hospitals, chair of the Expert Panel on Infection Control for the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto, a member of the Steering Committee on Infection Control Lignes directrices of Health Canada, chair of the Health Canada working group on Infection Prevention and Control and Occupational Health Lignes directrices for Pandemic Influenza and medical coordinator of the Region Infection Control Network (RICN).
Vearncombe is a past president of the Canadian Association of Medical Microbiologists and a past chair of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada Specialty Committee in Medical Microbiology. In 2005, she was the recipient of the Association of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Disease Canada Distinguished Service Award. In 2007, she received the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario Council Award and in 2010, she received the inaugural Community and Hospital Infection Control Association (CHICA-Canada) Champion Award.
Vearncombe has over 25 years of experience in infection control, with specific areas of interest in perinatal infection control and infection control issues in occupational health.
Dr. Bryna Warshawsky
CCPMI - Immunization member |
Bryna Warshawsky is the associate medical officer of health and director of Communicable Disease and Sexual Health Services for the Middlesex-London Health Unit. She graduated from McGill University with as a doctor of medicine in 1986.
After working as a family practitioner for three years, Warshawsky returned to the University of Toronto and obtained a master of health science in epidemiology and biostatistics, and a fellowship from the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons in Community Medicine.
Warshawsky joined the Middlesex-London Health Unit in September 1994 where her main areas of responsibilities are the prevention and control of communicable diseases and development of sexual health programming. Her areas of interest include vaccine preventable diseases and outbreak management. She is currently a member of the National Advisory Committee on Immunization. Warshawsky is cross-appointed in both the Departments of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, and Family Medicine at the University of Western Ontario.
Dr. Barbara Yaffe
CCPMI - Communicable Diseases member |
Barbara Yaffe is the director of Communicable Disease Control and associate medical officer of health for Toronto Public Health. She is a graduate of the University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine with a master’s degree in community health and epidemiology and completed a fellowship in community medicine. She is also an assistant professor with the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of Toronto.
Yaffe was a key leader in the investigation and management of the SARS outbreak in Toronto. She is a member of the OHA/OMA/MOHLTC Communicable Disease Protocol Committee and the Ontario Public Health e-Health Council.
Dr. Dick Zoutman
CCPMI Coordinating Committee co-chair
CCPMI - Infection Prevention and Control member
CCPMI – Surveillance member |
Dick Zoutman is professor and chair of the Divisions of Medical Microbiology and of Infectious Diseases Division at Queen’s University. He is also a professor of pathology and molecular medicine, of community health and epidemiology, and of medicine at Queen's University.
A primary focus of Zoutman’s investigative work has been the use of modern quality improvement methods in the prevention and control of health care associated infections as well as new sterilization and disinfection methods.
Zoutman is past physician-director of the Board of the Community and Hospital Infection Control Association of Canada having served for 12 years. During the 2003 outbreak of SARS in Toronto, Zoutman chaired the Ontario SARS Scientific Advisory Committee responsible for advising the Ontario Government on management strategies of the SARS outbreak. |