Hosted by
The Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC)’s Data, Surveillance and Foresight Branch (DSFB) and the National Collaborating Centre for Infectious Diseases (NCCID).
Date and time
May 28, 2024
1:00 to 2:00 Eastern Time / 12:00 to 1:00 Central Time
Language: Seminar is delivered in English.
Resources
Due to technical issues, there is no recording available for this presentation.
Learning Objectives
Presentation 1 – Dr. Jennifer Gardy:
- Describe the role genomics can play in surveillance, strategic planning, and commodity procurement in malaria-endemic countries
- Understand the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s strategic priorities for malaria genomic surveillance
- Articulate some of the challenges associated with establishing genomic surveillance capacity in sub-Saharan Africa
Presentation 2 – Dr. Linda Hoang:
- Describe advances in microbiology tools for surveillance, an important core function of a public health laboratory
- Outline the key applications of pathogen genomics for patient care and public health response
- Describe the development of a pathogen genomics program at the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control
- Outline features of a genomics infrastructure to inform patient care, public health, and One Health
Format
This seminar will be held on Zoom. Speakers will make their presentations for the first 30, followed by approximately 15 minutes for discussion and questions from attendees. Presentation materials in English and French will be distributed through NCCID media channels.
Moderators
- Signy Baragar, NCCID
- Louis Wong, DSFB
Speakers
- Dr. Jennifer Gardy, Deputy Director, Special Initiatives, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
- Dr. Linda Hoang, Medical Director, British Columbia Centre for Disease Control
Access Instructions
All instructions for the seminar series will be posted on the Zoom registration page and will be emailed to all registrants prior to the event. Following the event, recordings and slides for each seminar will be distributed through NCCID media channels.
Accreditation statement
Surveillance Advances is a self-approved group learning activity (Section 1) as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. Surveillance Advances is also approved by the Council of Professional Experience for professional development hours for members of the Canadian Institute of Public Health Inspectors.
Past Webinars
Surveillance Advances launched in September 2023 with a discussion about the foundational concepts of public health surveillance and the future opportunities that lie ahead. Subsequent seminars featured topics related to health inequalities (seminar 2), data science (seminar 3), maternal and newborn health (seminar 4), and injury surveillance (seminar 5). For a complete list of seminars and to view their recordings, please visit the Surveillance Advances webcasts page.