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Kitchener-Waterloo

Ontario cuts health research fund, redirects money to frontline care

Researchers at several universities, including University of Waterloo's School of Pharmacy, will have to find other ways to fund their research projects as the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care recently cancelled a major funding grant.

Open Stimulus grant funded health care research projects

UW's School of Pharmacy is one of several post-secondary institutions on Ontario that will be affected by the Ministry of Health's decision to cancel the Open Stimulus grant, which helped fund several research projects. (University of Waterloo School of Pharmacy/Facebook)

Some researchprojects under theOntario Pharmacy Evidence Network (OPEN) are at risk of not being completed after theMinistry of Health and Long Term Care terminatedthe OPEN Stimulusthree-year grant program.

Researchers that depended on that grant will now have to find other ways to come up with the moneyto continue their research projects.

"Our job at this stage is really to see what we can salvage," Nancy Waite, a professor from theUniversity of Waterloo School of Pharmacyand one of the heads of OPEN, told CBCKitchener-Waterloo.

The grant was one of 11funded by the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care thathelped fund research projects that looked into a variety of healthcare issues such as de-prescribingand delivery of medicationmanagement.

Affected research includes projects at the University of Waterloo School of Pharmacy, University of Toronto's faculty of Pharmacy, McMaster'sSchool of Medicine, MacEwan University,the BruyereResearch Instituteand Ryerson University.

Those projects will now end in July, 14 months earlier than the original date. Theministry has givenresearchers with the OPEN stimulus grant a 90-day wind down period.

Waite said researchers may have some results from projects that are further ahead, but others are at risk of not being completed if other forms of funds are not allocated.

"We'll do the best we can to apply for new funding, but a number of these project at this point are just going to have to go on hold," Waitesaid, noting that OPEN purely relies on funding and in-kind donations.

'It's disappointing'

The decision to cancel the OPEN Stimulus grant came after a budget review in which the province decided to movegovernmentresources to direct patient care efforts.

"As part of this commitment to redirect all available resources to frontline care, the government has made the decision to wind down certain research programs," the Ministry of Health and Long Term care said in an email to CBC.

Barbara Farrell is a pharmacist and a researcher with theBruyereResearch Institute in Ottawa, and part of the OPEN Stimulus grant program.

Her research has focused on improving multiple prescription, or polypharmacy,management for seniors. Without the grant, Farrell said she may not be able to complete her work.

"I'm looking at four years of work that I wont be able to complete unless I figure out another way to fund it," she said.

She had hoped to create information sessions for the community to help seniors learn more about their medication and how to have conversations about their medication to their healthcare providers.

The end goal, said Farrell, was to evaluate the sessions, and create andshare an implementation manual that other communities could use.

"It's disappointing because we will not be able to achieve the full scope of our plan," she said.

Waiteher project could have greatly benefited patients and healthcare providersin Ontario, but also could have helped make better healthcarepolicies in the future.

"When we don't have this data, policy is still made and often it can hit the mark, but what we say is that evidence informed policy is always a stronger policy," Waite said.