Funded projects by date
2020 |
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Promoting cognitive health in schizophrenia and related psychoses |
Piece of Mind Collective |
Funded projects summaries
2020
Promoting cognitive health in schizophrenia and related psychoses
This project team established a clinic at the Douglas Institute that offers psychological services tailored to psychosis and aims now to increase the accessibility of cognitive therapies. They will use digital technology to offer brief and on-going assessments of cognitive health which will better identify specific cognitive impairments. Finally, the team will increase awareness of cognitive difficulties and treatment strategies in psychosis through offering a community-oriented information session and bi-annual training to mental health professionals.
Principal investigator: Martin Lepage
Start date: August 31, 2020
Funding received: $100,000
Piece of Mind Collective
This project fosters meaningful collaboration for the co-construction of knowledge around Parkinson’s disease (PD) and dementia using the performing arts as an interactive knowledge mobilization format. They will form an interdisciplinary team of PD/dementia community stakeholders, performing artists and neuroscientists to create performance pieces that integrate recent scientific discoveries from the Montreal neuroscience community and lived experiences of those affected by these conditions.
Principal investigator: Stefanie Blain-Moraes
Start date: August 31, 2020
Funding received: $100,000
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2021
Implementing the Canadian Mental Health Recovery Guidelines: An Online Toolkit
The aim of this project is to create and disseminate a web-based Recovery Guideline Implementation Toolkit for implementing Guidelines for Recovery-Oriented Practice (MHCC).
Principal investigator: Piat Myra
Start date: February 15, 2021
Funding received: $100,000
Integrating measurement-based care and program budgeting and marginal analysis in the care of patients with psychosis
Measurement-based care (MBC) involves collecting data on outcomes of treatment and using that information to orient treatment. Other work points to the benefits of a process whereby a committee of stakeholders (managers, clinicians, service users) considers the costs and outcomes of different programs as well as a health care organization's objectives and reallocates funding across programs so as to improve overall outcomes. This pilot study aims to implement both at the same time, using outcomes from MBC to inform the reallocation process.
Principal investigator: Eric Latimer
Start date: September 1, 2021
Funding received: $99,581