Getting to know our Phase 2 Programs: Knowledge Mobilization

As recently announced, the next phase of the CHILD-BRIGHT Network is being made possible thanks to a grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) under Canada’s Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR), as well as matching funds from our generous partners. This support will allow us to grow from Network to Movement as we realize our mission for 2022-2026: moving our patient-oriented research into action through insight and methods grounded in implementation science and knowledge mobilization that embed the principles of equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization and Indigenization. 

In order to achieve this vision and become a movement for change for children and youth with brain-based developmental disabilities and their families, we have brought together experts from across Canada to lead our five patient-oriented programs.  

Our Knowledge Mobilization (KM) Program team will move knowledge across practice and policy by building an infrastructure that will direct evidence to targeted users (patients and families, health care providers, health care decision-makers, and community) using tailored, evidence-informed, user-friendly strategies and by carefully evaluating the impact of knowledge mobilization strategies. To do so, Phase 1 Knowledge Translation Program Co-Leads Keiko Shikako and Connie Putterman will be joined by Stephanie Glegg. 

Headshot of Connie Putterman

Connie Putterman 
CHILD-BRIGHT Knowledge Mobilization Program Co-Lead 
Parent and Professional Advocate and Mentor, Instructor and Coordinator for family partnership, engagement and inclusion in autism, neurodevelopmental and mental health research,
Family Engagement in Research Coordinator, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH)
 
Instructor, Co-Developer, Mentor, Consultant, Family Engagement in Research (FER) Course/Program, McMaster University/CanChild/Kids Brain Health Network 

Headshot of Keiko Shikako

Keiko Shikako
CHILD-BRIGHT Principal Investigator & Knowledge Mobilization Program Co-Lead
Canada Research Chair in Childhood Disabilities: Participation and Knowledge Translation
Associate Professor, McGill University | School of Physical and Occupational Therapy

Headshot of Stephanie Glegg

Stephanie Glegg
CHILD-BRIGHT Knowledge Mobilization Program Co-Lead
Investigator, BC Children's Hospital Research Institute
& Assistant Professor, Department of Occupational Science & Occupational Therapy
The University of British Columbia

We sat down with Connie, Keiko and Stephanie to learn more about the KM Program’s plans for Phase 2: 

WHAT IS YOUR PROGRAM’S MANDATE? 

Stephanie Glegg: First, I should clarify what we mean by knowledge mobilization. KM refers to both the activities involved in the co-creation of knowledge by researchers and knowledge users, and the use of research results and other knowledge to improve the health care system and its practices to enhance health outcomes. In CHILD-BRIGHT Phase 2, the KM Program and Implementation Science (IS) Research Program will be working together to mobilize knowledge across and beyond the network, with and for diverse knowledge users, including youth and families, health care providers, decision-makers, and community.  

Keiko Shikako: Building on the successful Knowledge Translation Program efforts from Phase 1, we will develop the infrastructure to support nation-wide KM by identifying the best KM practices to use with various groups of knowledge users. We will also augment our current Policy Hub to include new national clinical, family and community Hubs to support collaborative planning and multi-directional knowledge exchange across groups. Finally, as we put evidence-informed KM strategies in place, we will evaluate them systematically, so that we can advance the science of patient-oriented KM.  

Connie Putterman: Adding to this, we will engage knowledge users as active partners in KM throughout all phases of the work, including as planners, co-producers, messaging leaders, and end-user liaisons. To me, KM is all about communication strategies and competencies. It’s all about understanding the audiences you wish to inform and translating that knowledge in ways that are meaningful to them. We also want to ensure that the information is evidence informed, meaning that it comes from a place that has credibility through research and other ways of knowing. 

HOW DO YOU PLAN TO ACCOMPLISH THIS? WHAT ARE THE MAIN TOOLS (CONCEPTS, FRAMEWORKS) THAT WILL BE USED TO FURTHER THIS MANDATE? 

CHILD-BRIGHT members gathered around a table in discussion.

SG: KM, implementation science theory and evidence guide all our activities. We will also draw on network theory, because KM is inherently a social process that is enabled by our connections with one another. The KM Program will work with four key knowledge user groups by establishing Network Hubs: the Patient Hub, Clinician Hub, Policy Hub, and Community Hub. The purpose of these Hubs is to strengthen the relationships and facilitate communication within these specific groups to define priorities and then create opportunities for fluid, constant, and efficient knowledge exchange between the network and these groups. We’ll also consult with project teams in the use of best practices and evaluate our activities to identify what is working well, and where to shift our efforts.  

HOW WILL YOUR PROGRAM MEANINGFULLY ENGAGE PATIENT-PARTNERS? 

KS: The Phase 2 KM advisory committee will include partners with KM expertise from each of four key knowledge user groups in particular: patient-partners (family members and youth), health care and other service providers, decision-makers, and community organizations. The Hub structures we’ll be developing are a joint effort between the KM Program and the Citizen Engagement Program. We’ll also be collaborating with the Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, Decolonization and Indigenization (EDI-DI) Program to ensure that we are using best practices to engage equity-deserving groups, and that our activities resonate with and are informed by these groups. The Hubs are in essence all composed, co-led, co-designed in a participatory approach, bringing the concept of “patient-partners” to community partners and really sharing a vision that we are all equal members around the table—researchers, community members, patients, families, decision-makers, and youth—in the process of co-constructing knowledge and making sure academic research informs and is part of “the real world”. 

CP:  For me it comes from the top down and also the bottom up. For instance, built into the infrastructure of our program is a KM Parent Co-lead (me!). In all aspects of the decision-making at the governance level, I along with other parent-partner colleagues in similar roles will be contributing to those decisions. Our aim for the KM Program is to include other patient/family partners in all aspects of both the new infrastructure as described above, such as the design and the decision-making, and its implementation. When I say bottom up, I mean nurturing and capitalizing on the interest of the community, which will bring value, perspective and clarity in the act of partnering. 

STEPHANIE, TELL US MORE ABOUT YOU. WHAT MOTIVATED YOU TO TAKE ON THIS LEADERSHIP ROLE WITH CHILD-BRIGHT? 

SG: I’ve been a member of the CHILD-BRIGHT KT Committee since its inception and have had the pleasure of working with Connie and Keiko in that capacity. I’m an implementation scientist, with 15 years of experience facilitating KM in health care, so this work aligns with my passions. I’ve been involved in implementation and KM planning consultation, and in knowledge product/platform development and capacity-building initiatives through this work, which makes this role a great fit. My doctoral research examined the KM supports in place within pediatric health centres and research institutes across Canada, and patterns of social connections within these organizations that facilitate KM. This leadership role offers a space to apply the learnings from this work, to help the network expand its reach and impact using a holistic lens to mobilize meaningful change. 

CONNIE, KEIKO, WHAT LEARNINGS FROM PHASE 1 WILL YOU BE LEVERAGING IN PHASE 2? 

KS: Our co-leadership model with a parent-partner is one essential aspect that we will continue from Phase 1. We have worked in Phase 1 to develop mutual respect and relationships that are truly the base for participatory action research. The appreciation of perspectives, and trust among the team were invaluable to our co-lead and committee decision-making model. Parent-partners and youth were not only part of our KT committee in Phase 1, but were also part of setting priority research questions, collecting and analyzing data, and shared decisions about ways to use and disseminate information. We plan to continue this approach into Phase 2 and expand on the KM strategies and program evaluation.  

CP: We also learned that with KT and KM, there is a lot of internal advocacy and learning that needs to be done.  This means that among the CHILD-BRIGHT community we need to continue to work for clarity and understanding of what we can and can’t do in a research context.  

WHY IS IT IMPORTANT TO FOCUS ON MOBILIZING KNOWLEDGE ABOUT PATIENT-ORIENTED RESEARCH NOW? 

KS: Knowledge Translation Science as a field of inquiry has been out there for decades now. It has always been important to mobilize knowledge about patient-oriented research, but now we have developed tools, methods, and learned more about the critical aspects of it: true engagement from patients/citizens, the importance of evaluation, and the absolute necessity of listening to the priorities and directions of those who should use the information to guide research priorities. Involving patient and parent-partners as research team members increases the relevance of the research and helps to engage more knowledge users in research. KM is critical in ensuring that the findings of research, and the experiential knowledge of children, families, and health care providers, reaches the people who will benefit from or be impacted by it. If we want to effect real change in the health care system, KM needs to be informed by all the groups involved: from the “end-users” (patients, families) to the ones delivering health care (health care providers and community organizations) up to the ones making decisions about health care systems, budgets, and priorities (decision-makers). 

CP: In addition, the movement of patient-oriented research and engagement in research is still on a forward trajectory. We want to capture the momentum now while we are on an “upswing” and in a new frontier in the health research community. We have also learned from the growing body of evidence that patient/family/youth voices improve processes and lead to better health care outcomes for all.  

WHAT ARE YOU MOST EXCITED TO SEE IN PHASE 2?  

Two people read Post-Its posted on a brainstorming board

SG: We’re excited to be collaborating across programs so that the principles of EDI-DI, citizen engagement, training and capacity building, and implementation science can be integrated into everything we do, and hopefully vice versa. There is so much to learn about mobilizing knowledge while being attentive to and including different ways of knowing, including with groups that have been historically and systematically marginalized. It is important that we are finally paying attention not only to who has a seat at the table, but especially who does not have a seat, and we are not inviting them to “our table” but trying to find a way to their table to learn from them. This is the “movement” that is one of the most challenging ones in the “network to movement”, but one step that is absolutely necessary to be able to say we are really mobilizing knowledge across academia, communities, and systems. 

CP:  I am most excited to get out there and spread the word. It is still a bit of an unknown entity that someone from a non-academic setting can contribute and benefit from research in this way. No longer is research meant for the ivy tower. It’s meant for all of us! 

Thank you, Connie, Stephanie and Keiko, for this insight into the KM Program!  

If you have questions about our KM Program, reach out to our Program Coordinator Alix Zerbo

Learn more about our other Phase 2 programs: 

Getting to know our Phase 2 Programs: Citizen Engagement

As recently announced, the next phase of the CHILD-BRIGHT Network is being made possible thanks to a grant from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) under Canada’s Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR), as well as matching funds from our generous partners. This support will allow us to grow from Network to Movement as we realize our mission for 2022-2026: moving our patient-oriented research into action through insight and methods grounded in implementation science and knowledge mobilization that embed the principles of equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization and Indigenization. 

In order to achieve this vision and become a movement for change for children and youth with brain-based developmental disabilities and their families, we have brought together experts from across Canada to lead our five patient-oriented programs.  

For the past six years, our Citizen Engagement (CE) Program has monitored and enhanced citizen partnerships. In Phase 2, the CE team will continue to do so while assuming leadership nationally in promoting patient-oriented research in child health research and working closely with the EDI-DI Program to engage people who are underrepresented in the network. This important work will ensure that the rights of children with disabilities of diverse backgrounds and abilities are respected. Leading this work is Sharon McCarry, CHILD-BRIGHT’s Director of Citizen Engagement and Chair of the Citizen Engagement Council. 

 
Headshot of Sharon McCarry

Sharon McCarry
CHILD-BRIGHT Director of Citizen Engagement
Chair, Citizen Engagement Council

 

We sat down with Sharon to learn more about the CE Program’s plans for Phase 2: 

WHAT IS YOUR PROGRAM’S MANDATE? 

Donna Thomson in discussion with other CHILD-BRIGHT members at an event.

Sharon McCarry: Citizens—children and youth, patients, parents, family members, caregivers, and health professionals—are at the heart of CHILD-BRIGHT. Our program aims to meaningfully engage people touched by brain-based developmental disabilities to guide the ongoing work of the network.  

Since CHILD-BRIGHT’s beginnings, we have fostered meaningful engagement with youth and families, notably through the creation of our Citizen Engagement Council (CEC), composed of youth and young adults with brain-based developmental disabilities, parents of children with brain-based developmental disabilities, and other members, including researchers and health professionals. The CEC launched multiple measurement strategies to understand the engagement and partnership experiences of our network members. We created a Parent Liaison role to guide and support our parent-partners and spaces co-designed by and for youth with lived experience of brain-based developmental disabilities to be heard in research by developing our National Youth Advisory Panel.  

HOW DO YOU PLAN TO ACCOMPLISH THIS? WHAT ARE THE MAIN TOOLS (CONCEPTS, FRAMEWORKS) THAT WILL BE USED TO FURTHER THIS MANDATE?  

SM: As we build on our successes from the past six years, a big priority for CE will be engaging citizens from equity-deserving communities. We recently recruited new youth and we are also planning on leveraging current relationships with our members and the EDI-DI team to form new connections and build relationships with new organizations, community groups, and people living in rural environments. 

In Phase 1, we developed several resources from lessons learned to enhance patient-oriented research.  We will work with our project teams so they can incorporate these lessons at the start of their implementation science research projects, such as the tips that were developed out of responses to our stakeholder engagement study. These resources will also become part of a toolkit to support capacity building for investigators in child health research institutes and centres across Canada. 

We’ll also collaborate with the Training & Capacity Building Program to train our members in new concepts that are key to our Phase 2 work, including implementation science, knowledge mobilization, and equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization and Indigenization, so they can fully and confidently engage with our network. 

TELL US MORE ABOUT YOU. WHAT MOTIVATED YOU TO TAKE ON THIS LEADERSHIP ROLE WITH CHILD-BRIGHT? 

SM: I’ve been a passionate community advocate for families living with autism spectrum disorder and brain-based developmental disabilities since 2007 and I am committed to making meaningful and significant change in policies and services for the disability community. I initially joined CHILD-BRIGHT in 2018 as a parent-partner and member of the Strongest Families ND Parent Advisory Committee. Then, in 2021 I took on the role of Director of Citizen Engagement and Chair of the Citizen Engagement Council. I’m excited to be at the helm of the CE Program, working with our amazing CEC at such a pivotal time for the network, as focus turns to becoming a movement for change for children, youth and families.  

WHY IS AUTHENTIC PATIENT-PARTNERSHIP SO IMPORTANT FOR RESEARCH?  

SM: As a network falling under Canada’s Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research (SPOR), CHILD-BRIGHT has been at the forefront of a shift in health research. We are conducting research ‘with’ or ‘by’ patient, youth and family partners, as well as other network members, instead of ‘for’ them. This approach is intended to promote a better health system and better health outcomes.  

In order to fully realize our mandate, and as we strive to align with the disability community’s mandate of “nothing about us without us”, it’s crucial that we create and maintain ever stronger connections with patients, youth, families, caregivers, and the community at large.   

WHAT LEARNINGS FROM PHASE 1 WILL YOU BE LEVERAGING IN PHASE 2? 

SM: We can learn a lot from our first round of onboarding network members. In Phase 2, we’ll be especially focused on clarifying roles and expectations for our patient-partners involved at the project, committee and network levels. We hope this will ensure early engagement of all our members in the research process. In Phase 1, we also developed compensation guidelines, which we will provide to patient, youth and family members involved in our research and network efforts right from the get-go.   

Thanks to the three-part stakeholder engagement study conducted in Phase 1, we were able to gather a lot of valuable information that we can act on to enhance the engagement experience of our network.   

For example, we learned about the need to develop relationships among patient, youth and family representatives and research team members in informal ways. Closed or smaller group conversations and coffee chats are great for this!  

We’ll also emphasize effective and ongoing communication to clarify project goals and allow network members to stay actively involved. Regular check-ins with members during each phase of the research process will be a big part of that communication, as will offering accommodations and flexibility around people’s schedules and methods of participation in committee or project activities. 

WHAT ARE YOU MOST EXCITED TO SEE IN PHASE 2?  

SM: I’m most excited to see research culminate in changes to policy and practice for children, youth, and families with brain-based developmental disabilities! For the CE Program specifically, I’m looking forward to increased cross-collaboration between programs, looking at the terminology we use to ensure our language truly represents all our members, updating our compensation guidelines, and more. I’m optimistic about what our network can accomplish when we work together to bring about real change. 

Thank you, Sharon, for this insight into the Citizen Engagement Program!  

Consult the list of current opportunities to get involved with our network here. If you’re interested in participating in the Citizen Engagement Program, reach out to Citizen Engagement Coordinator/Project Manager Corinne Lalonde

Learn more about our other Phase 2 programs: 

Announcing CHILD-BRIGHT Phase 2!

We are happy to share that CHILD-BRIGHT’s application to the SPOR Networks – Knowledge Mobilization and Implementation Science competition was successful! In total, the CHILD-BRIGHT Network will receive $3.75M from CIHR over four years which, combined with partner matching funds of $5.27M, will finance our work from 2022-2026. This will help us grow from Network to Movement as we realize our mission for Phase 2: moving our patient-oriented research into action through insight and methods grounded in implementation science and knowledge mobilization that embed the principles of equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization and Indigenization.

This is great news for the approximate 850,000 children in Canada living with brain-based developmental disabilities and their families, as well as individuals at high risk for a brain-based disability.

 
 

How will we achieve our mission? 

During CHILD-BRIGHT Phase 1, from 2016 to 2021, we developed novel interventions to improve the health outcomes of children with brain-based developmental disabilities using child and family-focused approaches. We did this to optimize their development, as well as to identify ways to deliver more responsive and supportive services to them and their families.

Thanks to our patient-oriented research approach, we made great strides and created positive change for these children and their families in Canada!

In CHILD-BRIGHT Phase 2, from 2022 to 2026, we will focus on equitably mobilizing and implementing this knowledge.

Building on our initial efforts, we intend to augment our emphasis on equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization and Indigenization (EDI-DI), and further shape our patient-oriented research, implementation science agenda, and knowledge mobilization efforts. We will do so by meaningfully engaging key people, paying careful attention to those who may experience differing health care needs due to socio-demographic factors, or whose voices have been historically excluded.

 
  • Knowledge mobilization refers to getting knowledge to appropriate knowledge users when they need it and in a format that is suitable to them, for uptake.

  • Implementation science is the study of how a novel, evidence-based intervention will interact with real-world settings. The goal is to understand what needs to be in place for the intervention to succeed in practice.

  • Visit our EDI-DI framework for full definitions of equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization, and indigenization, and to learn more about our commitment to EDI-DI.

 

What outputs will we generate in Phase 2? 

Using our Phase 2 funding, we will:

  1. Study how to bring novel, evidence-informed interventions to the health care and community systems. For this, we will select Phase 1 interventions that can be incorporated into health systems to serve the needs of children, youth, and families.

  2. Co-build the infrastructure to spread relevant knowledge to knowledge users, such as children, youth and families, Indigenous and other equity-deserving communities, health professionals, and decision-makers in a targeted fashion, using tools such as podcasts, videos, policy briefings, dialogues, and champions.

  3. Train patient-oriented research teams to plan for equitable and sustainable health intervention implementation, spread, and scale.

  4. Support ongoing patient engagement in research and governance, and amplify patient voices in decision-making.

  5. Build relationships with individuals and communities, and ensure that diverse and culturally appropriate strategies are embedded across the network.

By expanding our impact, helping to change the child health ecosystem (health care, social services, recreation, education, family and home), and continuing on our current trajectory, 
CHILD-BRIGHT will not only achieve its vision of brighter futures for children with brain-based developmental disabilities and their families, but will also become a movement for change: 

moving patients into research teams, moving research into improved practice and policy, 
and moving children and families forward to brighter futures.
— CHILD-BRIGHT Executive

How will the infrastructure of the network support this? 

In Phase 1, we built the necessary infrastructure and teams to support our four patient-oriented programs in research, training, knowledge translation, and citizen engagement. We will leverage these programs and teams in Phase 2 while channeling our energies towards expanding knowledge mobilization outside the network, integrating implementation science, and embedding principles of equity, diversity, inclusion, decolonization and Indigenization throughout our work.

Our Phase 2 programs are:

  • The Implementation Science (IS) Research Program. The IS Research team, co-led by Janet Curran and Steven Miller, will focus our research to better understand how evidence generated in Phase 1 can be systematically applied in routine practice to improve quality and effectiveness of health services. Read more and meet the IS leads.

  • The Knowledge Mobilization (KM) Program. The KM team, co-led by Keiko Shikako and Stephanie Glegg, will influence practice and policy by building an infrastructure that will direct knowledge to targeted users (patients and families, health care providers, health care decision-makers, policy makers) using tailored, evidence-informed, user-friendly strategies and by carefully evaluating impact. Read more and meet the KM leads.

  • The Training & Capacity Building (T&CB) Program. The T&CB team, co-led by Daniel Goldowitz and Celia Laur, will continue developing capacity in patient-oriented research, with new curricular content that will emphasize topics related to understanding and applying IS and KM methods and EDI-DI principles as they intersect with patient-oriented research. Read more and meet the T&CB leads.

  • The Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, Decolonization and Indigenization (EDI-DI) Program. The EDI-DI team, led by Nomazulu Dlamini, will deploy initiatives to ensure that EDI-DI principles are authentically embedded in our four other programs and our governance structure. Read more and meet the EDI-DI lead.

  • The Citizen Engagement (CE) Program. The CE team, led by Sharon McCarry, will continue to monitor and enhance citizen partnerships and will assume leadership nationally in promoting patient-oriented research in child health research. The CE team will work closely with the EDI-DI Program to engage citizens (patient-partners and other groups) who are underrepresented in the network. This important work will ensure that the rights of children with disabilities of diverse backgrounds and abilities are respected and met. Read more and meet the CE lead.

Our work would not be possible without our funders. Meet them! 

Platinum Partners ($1M +) 

 
 
 

Gold Partners ($500,000 to $999,000)

Silver Partners ($100,000 to $499,000)

Bronze Partners ($1 to $99,999)

Join us as we embark on this new phase of work! Together, we are changing the landscape of patient-oriented research in Canada to better help children and youth with brain-based developmental disabilities, as well as their families.

CHILD-BRIGHT members lead submission of report to UN Committee on the Rights of the Child on children with disabilities in Canada

Children with disabilities are often overlooked when discussing disability rights and children’s rights. Having research-based data to inform the gaps and services needs for these children in Canada and having them represented and engaged in the international children’s rights context is a unique chance to raise awareness about the specific needs of children. 

The Participation and Knowledge Translation in Childhood Disability (PAR-KT ) Lab, led by Canada Research Chair in Childhood Disability: Participation and Knowledge Translation and CHILD-BRIGHT KT Co-Lead Keiko Shikako, led the submission of a parallel report and subsequent update on children with disabilities in Canada during COVID to the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (UN CRC Committee).

The report, initially published in 2020, outlines issues faced by children with disabilities in Canada based on research evidence and the lived experiences of parents and youth, areas of opportunity in relation to these issues, and recommendations that can begin to address these problems. It also presents testimonials provided by parents of children with disabilities that highlight positive developments as well as areas of opportunity. Learn more about the reporting process below.


Key dates in the reporting timeline

October 2020

Youth from the CHILD-BRIGHT community participate in the UN CRC Committee pre-session where they speak on topics of importance for children with disabilities in the context of children’s rights.

2021

 A UN CRC Committee meeting with the Government of Canada (called a “constructive dialogue”) is planned but is postponed due to the pandemic.


March 2022

Photo of Colm and Sharon McCarry in front of Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Canada

Colm and Sharon McCarry in front of Parliament Hill in Ottawa

The Canadian Civil Society Organizations, led by the Canadian Coalition on the Rights of Children, ask several partners to suggest groups of children and youth who should be engaged in a constructive dialogue with the Government of Canada. Youth from the CHILD-BRIGHT community also participate in these consultations with the Civil Society Organizations, including Colm McCarry.

Colm is 18 years old and identifies as an Autistic person with low vision in one eye and ADHD.  He is a full-time student at the Ontario Virtual School completing grade 12, although he lives in Montreal, Quebec. He said:

This was a very cool experience to be included in a group of young Canadians that were sharing their experiences and I felt heard. I felt we were all listening and so were the organizers. We weren’t just people with a diagnosis being asked to show up as a token group being scrutinized. I felt that there was hope that something positive will come out of our participation and maybe real changes will happen to consider the realness of mental health being an important part of everyone’s overall well-being. Mental health is health care, period.
— Colm McCarry

May 6, 2022

Keiko Shikako takes part in a meeting of a group of Canadian Civil Society Organizations and the UN CRC Committee. “In this meeting we impressed upon the committee that children with disabilities in Canada continue to face discrimination,” Keiko shared. “Data being collected at the federal level only reflects a small part of the reality of children, such as the number of children who have functional limitations, but not the impacts of these limitations on their ability to participate in school, play, and other fundamental areas of development.”

“During the pandemic, these inequalities were highlighted. For instance, in many of our research studies we saw that children with disabilities who receive all their health and rehabilitation services through schools were left with little or no accommodations and services. Considerations were also not taken in the return to school, leaving families and children without essential supports they needed. Mental health services for children with disabilities were also compromised. Families described how the pandemic impacted their child’s levels of anxiety and, in some cases, augmented behaviour issues.”

“Emergency responses should consider the specific needs of children with disabilities and their families. The Government of Canada should take advantage of the efforts being put towards the implementation and monitoring of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities along with the Convention on the Rights of Children to maximize opportunities and not duplicate efforts.”

 

May 17-18, 2022

The UN CRC Committee constructive dialogue with the Government of Canada, which had been postponed due to the pandemic, finally takes place. In this session, the Government of Canada meets with the UN CRC Committee and is asked about concrete actions that they have taken since the last report in 2020. These questions are important, as they will guide the development of a set of “Concluding Observations” for Canada, a document which then comes the reference point for another cycle of implementation of the rights of children. Some of the questions that are presented to the committee members through the PAR-KT lab report and during the session with the committee are asked by committee members to the Canadian government delegation.

 

How you can engage in the CRC reporting process

As a part of the childhood disability community, here are some steps you can take to engage in the CRC monitoring and reporting process:

  • Watch the Canada review session here;

  • If you hear anything that you think the PAR-KT lab should follow up on, or that misrepresents the particular needs of children and youth with disabilities, you can write to Keiko Shikako, who will be following up with the UN CRC Committee along with the Canadian Coalition for the Rights of Children to address issues that come up during the review session;

  • Commit to reading the Concluding Observations that the UN CRC Committee will make to the Government of Canada after the review. This document can be used as a tool to keep the government accountable to policies that should be implemented to respond to the needs identified. It can also help guide research to respond to the human rights of children with disabilities and can inform clinical practice and community action towards creating a society that respects, promotes, and facilitates the fundamental rights of children with disabilities and their families to live happy, health, playful lives.

How you can learn more about the reporting process and Canada’s contribution

Former CHILD-BRIGHT research assistant headed to World Para Swimming Championships in Madeira

Jessica Tinney swimming at the Canadian Swimming Trials in April 2022.

Jessica Tinney at the Canadian Swimming Trials in April 2022. Photo credit: Scott Grant

We’re proud to share that former CHILD-BRIGHT Research Assistant Jessica Tinney will be representing Canada at the World Para Swimming Championships in Madeira in June!

Jessica qualified for the World Championships following the 2022 Canadian Swimming Trials from April 5 to 10 in Victoria, British Columbia, where she received a bronze medal in the 200m Freestyle and broke a Canadian record in the 200m Individual Medley.

A soon-to-be graduate of the kinesiology program at Queen’s University, Jessica joined our Knowledge Translation (KT) Program team in the summer of 2021 to put together our new KT Library, which is an evolving repository for the wide range of KT products created by our network since its inception in 2016.  The library houses many scientific and plain language publications, books and book chapters, reports, webinars, infographics and much more.

The library was created to further the KT Program’s goal of facilitating exchange and promoting the uptake and dissemination of existing and new knowledge relevant to children with brain-based developmental disabilities and their families—a mission that was a direct inspiration for Jessica when applying to work with CHILD-BRIGHT.

“The [job] description was about disseminating articles to make it so people who the research is actually meant for can read them. I thought that was interesting, based on my background and having a disability and not being able to read or understand the information before I went to school. I thought that'd be really cool,” she said. As part of the KT Library team, Jessica wrote plain language versions of some of the scientific journal articles published by network members and added the various resources and outputs to the library on the CHILD-BRIGHT website.

As a person with cerebral palsy, Jessica’s experiences with medical care have also driven home for her the importance of communicating knowledge in an accessible way to patients. She described going to doctor’s appointments and grappling with complicated explanations provided to her: “I never understood how any of it like related to me or what I needed to get from what they were saying, so I think to have like a resource, something like what we're doing here, would be really helpful to people.”

The time she spent in and out of physiotherapist offices as a youth, in particular, is also how she first found her way to swimming.

“I first started [swimming] because I really, really hated physiotherapy!” Jessica admitted, to the point that as a child she “would refuse to go” to her appointments.

Headshot of Jessica Tinney

Jessica Tinney

“I was originally in swimming lessons and my mom put me on a team. Then, when I went to my doctor’s appointments, they asked if I did physio, and I said no, I swim this many times a week. They said, ‘Great! Keep doing that and then you don’t have to go to physio.’”

She would begin her competitive swimming career in earnest as a teenager, but “my love for the sport grew from there. That's how I first got into it,” she shared.

After graduating from Queen’s this June, Jessica will be taking a year off school, but is actually considering a return to school the following year to study physiotherapy, equipped with her newfound experience in patient-oriented research.

We’re grateful to Jessica for her contributions to our Knowledge Translation team and wish her the best of luck in Madeira. We’ll be rooting for her and we’re excited to see what comes next!