A sketch of Michael G. DeGroote
  • “I am investing in new discoveries in health care and in the delivery of health care.”

    - Michael G. DeGroote

Applications are now open for the latest round of the Michael G. DeGroote Fellowship Awards. The application deadline is April 1, 2023.

The DeGroote Fellowship Awards are offered in TWO categories:

1) The Michael G. DeGroote Fellowship Award in Basic Biomedical Science. Candidates conducting basic science research will be eligible for the Basic Biomedical Science Fellowship Award 

2) The Michael G. DeGroote Fellowship Award in Clinical Research. Candidates pursuing clinical research will be eligible for the Clinical Research Fellowship Award.

Applicants must identify in their application which award they are applying for. Separate selection committees review the respective applicants for each award.



What are the Michael G. DeGroote Fellowship Awards?



The prestigious Michael G. DeGroote Fellowship Awards provide postdoctoral candidates in the Faculty of Health Sciences the opportunity to pursue leading-edge health sciences research.

The awards are designed for candidates who have an exemplary academic record and are interested in pursuing postdoctoral work in one of the numerous areas of research excellence in the Faculty of Health Sciences at McMaster University. Funded through the generosity of Michael G. DeGroote, the award will provide support of $40,000 for one year. This amount is to be supplemented with $10,000 from applicants’ proposed supervisor(s), for a total annual amount of $50,000 for one year.

Successful candidates for these awards will have the opportunity to work with Health Sciences faculty who are conducting innovative research and are considered among the best in their fields. They will have access to state-of-the-art facilities that enable progressive research designed to impact health care throughout the world.



Eligibility


Please note that candidates must fulfill or have fulfilled all degree requirements for a PhD, PhD-equivalent or health professional degree in order to be eligible for these awards.

To be eligible for this program, you must have started your postdoctoral or health professional degree studies on, or after, July 1, 2022. Additionally, eligible candidates must be within five years of receiving their PhD or MD. Individuals who completed post-doctoral studies or a fellowship at McMaster under a different supervisor are not eligible.

The candidate must plan to conduct their research in a department or school (or related centre or institute) that resides in the Faculty of Health Sciences at McMaster University.

For candidates who hold (or are completing) a PhD, the proposed supervisor(s) listed in your application must be different than your PhD supervisor. Your proposed supervisor must be from within the Faculty of Health Sciences, but you could have a co-supervisor that is from another Faculty.

Priority will be given to those applicants whose graduate training has not been exclusively at McMaster.



News

McMaster researchers crafting post-COVID syndrome guidelines

Mar 9, 2023, 16:17 PM by Fram Dinshaw
McMaster University clinician-researcher Holger Schünemann is receiving $9 million in federal funding to develop official guidelines for post-COVID-19 Condition (PCC), commonly known as long COVID.

McMaster University clinician-researcher Holger Schünemann is receiving $9 million in federal funding to develop official guidelines for post-COVID-19 Condition (PCC), commonly known as long COVID.

Schünemann’s project, titled McMaster Development and Dissemination of Post COVID-19 Condition (PCC) Guidelines and Knowledge Translation Products, is being developed by McMaster in collaboration with the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC).

Schünemann said that Cochrane Canada and the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) Centre at McMaster will develop, disseminate and evaluate six evidence-based health guidelines on PCC that will focus on its Canadian context. These guidelines, to be published early in 2024, aim to cover identification, prevention, assessment, management, follow-up and monitoring of people with PCC.

The large national team with links to global health organizations will be co-led by Robby Nieuwlaat from the Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact (HEI) and Nancy Santesso, Jan Brozek, Wojtek Wiercioch, together with a team of experts in the field at McMaster, plus Kevin Pottie at Western University.

“Post COVID-19 condition requires high-quality research to better understand and manage the problems that affected people face. This new research together with what is already known must be synthesized and provided to decision-makers, including the public, in ways that improves lives,” said Schünemann, a professor in the HEI and director of both Cochrane Canada and GRADE.

“At Cochrane Canada and the McMaster GRADE Centre, in collaboration with partners and the public, we are privileged to play a leading role in producing and implementing health guidelines based on the best available approaches to address PCC.”

Researchers will create easy-to-use tools to bring evidence into clinical practice and the community, paying particular attention to equity-deserving populations.

“The development of tools in parallel with developing the guidelines will help the public and health practitioners to access and use the recommendations in a timely manner,” said Nieuwlaat, an associate professor in the HEI and co-lead of the project.

“Another component of this project will evaluate the uptake of the tools and recommendations to understand what was successful and what needs to be improved for the longer term.”

In addition to this, more than 20 McMaster researchers are part of the pan-Canadian Long COVID Web research network to be led by the University Health Network and the University of Toronto, which received a $20 million investment from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) to develop accurate diagnostics, treatments, and rehabilitation strategies for PCC.

“For some, COVID-19 is not something that lasts a few days. Its effects may stay long after the initial illness, making day-to-day living difficult,” said Minister of Health Jean-Yves Duclos.

“Today’s announcement of the Long COVID Web research network offers hope—and real solutions to come—to those living with post COVID-19 condition. Additionally, the development of new clinical practice guidelines will help to support health care workers and people in Canada in preventing, managing and recovering from post COVID-19 condition.”

What is PCC?
Health Canada says that anyone who experiences physical or psychological symptoms for more than 12 weeks after getting COVID-19 is classified as having PCC. The condition is not the same as COVID-19, as symptoms can be highly different from those experienced during the initial infection.

Common PCC symptoms include fatigue, breathlessness, memory problems, brain fog, general pain and discomfort, anxiety and depression, among others. More than 100 different symptoms have been reported.

The best way to avoid PCC is to avoid COVID-19 infections by taking measures such as getting vaccinated and wearing masks in public places. Early evidence suggests that vaccination with two or more doses before a COVID-19 infection may help reduce the risk of developing PCC.

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