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News

Call for Expressions of Interest: Graduate Student Research Fellowship - Urban Indigenous Guidance Circle

Our CIHR-Funded research project, “Supporting Vulnerable and Older Adults to be Cared for and to Die at ‘Home’”, is looking to do research better with direction provided by our Urban Indigenous Guidance Circle (UIGC). We are currently looking to recruit one or two Indigenous Graduate Students who might be looking for a unique opportunity to take part as a member of our UIGC for a minimum one-year term. A stipend of $5,000 per year will be provided to the successful applicant. Applications are due by March 1, 2025, and can be emailed to the project coordinator, Ami Bitschy, amice@uvic.ca. For more information around how to apply to this opportunity, the UIGC, or our research project – please read the attached, Call for Expressions of Interest document.

Kelli Stajduhar and Carren Dujela, members of our research program contributed insights and support for a report recently released by the Te Ārai Research Group.

Kelli Stajduhar Featured On Radical Nurse Talk

Professor Kelli Stajduhar featured on the latest episode of Radical Nurse Talk!

Kelli Stajduhar Named Visiting Hood Fellow

Professor Kelli Stajduhar has been named as a 2024 Hood Fellow by the University of Auckland. Nominated by the Te Ārai Research Group, she will visit New Zealand next autumn. While there, she will give a public lecture at the university open to the public, hold seminars with School of Nursing staff and liaise with organisations working in the homelessness and palliative care sector.

Palliative Approaches team member Charlotte Futcher has written an op-ed in response to media coverage of a police-involved death in Squamish.

Our ePAC collaborative is incredibly grateful to have been one of eight grant recipients selected by the Sovereign Order of St. John of Jerusalem Knights Hospitaller Victoria Commandery (Victoria Commandery).

Post-doctoral fellows Tara Horrill and Vidhi Thakkar and PhD student Amber Bourgeois win prestigious awards.

This new publication evaluates the challenges of embedding palliative approaches to care into long-term care.

This new publication highlights the experiences of care aides and nursing professionals in the provision of palliative approaches to care in long-term care.

In recognition of her substantial contributions and sustained impact on nursing, Kelli Stajduhar was named as a member of the inaugural class of Fellows of the Canadian Academy of Nursing.

Kelli Stajduhar and Denise Cloutier have a blunt conversation about one of our greatest fears about dying: being alone.

UVic News does a convocation profile on Nursing grad Sydney Hofmeyr, an ePAC practicum student who hosted the "Before I Die..." art installation.

PACACH's Ashley Mollison is one of four UVic researchers named Vanier Canada Graduate Scholars in an annual competition, second PACACH graduate student to receive award in two years.

UVic doctoral student, Reanne Booker, Oncology and Palliative Care Nurse Practitioner is a 2019 recipient of the Vanier Doctoral Fellowship award for her research on the early integration of palliative care with bone marrow transplant patients.

Working with inner city palliative care teams in three Canadian cities (Victoria, Calgary and Toronto), EiPC's Kelli Stajduhar, a nursing professor and research affiliate with UVic’s Institute on Aging and Lifelong Health, will lead a new study that aims to expand our understanding of the non-traditional caregiver experience by exploring who provides palliative care, what types of supports they provide, where care usually happens, and the impacts on caregivers.

Ashley Mollison and Kara Whitlock, on behalf of the ePAC collaborative, write about the development of new community-informed advanced care planning (ACP) tools.

ePAC's Kelli Stajduhar and Erin Donald write about how COVID-19 could impact socially disadvantaged communities, and what that means for their palliative care.

Death may be the great equalizer, but access to good end-of-life care is rarely equitable. A new mobile palliative care program is addressing that imbalance by providing care and dignity to people in Victoria with life-limiting illnesses who are homeless and living in poverty. The Palliative Outreach Resource Team (PORT)—launched Sept. 19—is built upon lessons learned from a three-year study led by UVic palliative care researcher Kelli Stajduhar, lead investigator of the Equity in Palliative Approaches to Care program with the Institute on Aging and Lifelong Health and the School of Nursing.

NURS456 practicum students Sydney Hofmeyr & Rowen Harris write about the launch of the The Palliative Outreach Resource Team (PORT) on the ePAC blog.