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Nova Scotia

N.S. researchers receive nearly $1.5M to study impacts of COVID-19

Three researchers at Dalhousie University and the IWK Health Centre have each received nearly $500,000 to study the impacts the pandemic has had on children with complex care needs, women who face violence and equity-seeking groups.

Three separate studies will examine pandemic's effect on women, children and equity-deserving groups

Researcher Janet Curran of Dalhousie University in Halifax, N.S., is looking into the wider impact of COVID-19 on families of children with complex health needs. (Daniel Abriel/Dalhousie University)

Three teams of researchers from Nova Scotia have received almost $500,000 each from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research to examine how the pandemic is affecting the lives of children with complex needs, woman who face violence and equity-deserving groups.

The studies are among965 research projects related to the COVID-19 pandemicfunded by the national funding organization to date. Theyare designed to offer recommendations on how to better serve those specific groupswhen public health safeguards are imposed.

Janet Curran, IWK Health Centre researcher and Dalhousie University professor, got $490,758,which includedcontributions from the New Brunswick Health Foundation,"to examine the wider impact of COVID-19 measureson the lives of children with complex care needs and the families."

Curran said the study, likely to take a year to complete, will include at leasta dozen families from each of the three Maritime provinces.

"We know pre-pandemic that there was a gap between what was available for these families in Nova Scotia, and in the Maritimes for that matter, [and theirneeds].We know that the pandemic only widened that gap," said Curran.

She saidrespite care wasn't available to families who needed someone to come into their homes during the pandemicand that educational supports also evaporated when schools across the region moved to virtual classes."This had a huge impact on these patients and these families," said Curran, who has previouslypublished a study on respite care for children with complex needs.

Curranis relying onsome families involved in her earlierwork to help shape this study.

"We've constructed a team of parents in the Maritimes who are helping guide this work," she said. "They're actually helping us to identify what are relevant public health policies and mandates that we should pay attention to."

"For example, the closure of playgrounds and school yards, which they use as space to take their children for respite."

Curran is hoping policy-makers will be able to use the results of this studyas well as its recommendations in future health emergencies.

" And I also think that it allows us to be mindful of how vulnerable, exceptionally vulnerable, these families are in such public health emergencies," said Curran.

Two other Dalhousie University researchersAlexa Yakubovichand Janice Graham also receivedfunds.

Yakubovichgot $499,647 "to identify and contextualize best practices in responding to violence against women during theCOVID-19 pandemic, whileGraham received $489,556 to "engage with social scientists, public health experts, and members of equity-deserving groups to develop recommendations for a more equitable and supportive healthcare governance framework in post-COVID Canada."