Improving Care

Reducing morbidity and mortality and enhancing quality of life

Informing Policy

Transforming health care at the local, national and international levels

Featured Projects

With more than 80 scientists, research at Advancing Health encompasses a wide breadth of areas

COVID-19

The Evidence Speaks

A recurring feature highlighting the latest in Advancing Health research

Our People

In the News

Research Resources

From design to execution, Advancing Health provides a broad range of support services

Work in Progress Seminar Series

Announcements
Our People

Dr. Nick Bansback recognized for his work in health technology assessment

Posted on

by

Dr. Nick Bansback (left) with Brian O’Rourke, CADTH President and Chief Executive Officer, at CADTH’s 2016 Symposium. Courtesy CADTH.

Congratulations to CHÉOS Scientist Dr. Nick Bansback who has received this year’s Maurice McGregor Award from CADTH.

Dr. Bansback’s research aims to inform policies and practices in health through the application of health economics and decision theory. He has published widely in the use of preference-based instruments such as the EQ-5D, conducted numerous economic evaluations in rheumatology and is currently focusing his research on improving decision-making at the patient/physician consultation using decision support tools.

This award was established in 2014 to recognize rising health technology assessment (HTA) stars early in their careers, and is named in honour of Dr. Maurice McGregor, retired Chair of the Technology Assessment Unit of the McGill University Health Centre and Professor Emeritus of McGill University. Affectionately known to his colleagues as the “grandfather of HTA in Canada,” Dr. McGregor was also appointed Officer of the Order of Canada for having pioneered and championed the field of HTA in Canada and for his leadership in medical education and cardiology.

Dr. Bansback will be formally presented with his award at the 2016 CADTH Symposium. This year’s symposium takes place April 10 to 12 in Ottawa, and the theme for this year’s event is “Evidence for Everyone: Expanding the Reach of Health Technology Assessment.”

He and his fellow CHÉOS investigators Drs. Aslam Anis, Mark Harrison, Larry Lynd, and Wei Zhang are presenting at the symposium.

Congrats, Nick!


Abstracts:
Zhang W, Anis A. How to measure and value work productivity loss due to illness. CADTH 2016 Symposium. Ottawa, ON; April 10–12, 2016. Workshop AM-3.
Lynd L, Coyle D, Evans G, Lun E, Tam R. Exploring contemporary pressures on pharmaceutical reimbursement in an era of orphan drugs and personalized medicine. CADTH 2016 Symposium. Ottawa, ON; April 10–12, 2016. Concurrent Session A6 – Panel Discussion.
Bansback N, Pechlivanoglou P, Cameron C, Kanters S, Veroniki AA. New methods in generating evidence for everyone: Can we improve evidence synthesis approaches? CADTH 2016 Symposium. Ottawa, ON; April 10–12, 2016. Concurrent Session C4 – Panel Discussion.
Harrison M, Bansback N, Marshall D, Bryan S. The contribution of patient-reported outcome measures to health care sustainability. CADTH 2016 Symposium. Ottawa, ON; April 10–12, 2016. Concurrent Session E5 – Panel Discussion.

Recent Stories

At Advancing Health, we produce high-quality evidence to change health care through improved patient care, evidence-informed policy, and innovative health system approaches.