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The actions of Nathaniel Veltman, who was convicted of murder and attempted murder after deliberately driving his truck into five members of the Afzaal family in London, Ont., on June 6, 2021, amounted to terrorism under Canadian law, a judge ruled Thursday. Matt Galloway speaks with child and adolescent psychiatrist Dr. Javeed Sukhera, who knew the Afzaal family; and Jessica Davis, president of Insight Threat Intelligence and a former CSIS Analyst.
Meghan O'Brien, MD, MBE, and Research in Medical Education (RIME) Committee members Tasha Wyatt, PhD, and Javeed Sukhera, MD, PhD, join host Toni Gallo to discuss new research into faculty perspectives on responding to microaggressions targeting medical students in the clinical learning environment. They explore several tensions that affected how faculty responded to the microaggressions in the study scenarios as well as some of the strategies the faculty used to respond effectively. This is the final episode in this year's 3-part series of discussions with RIME authors about their medical education research and its implications for the field. A transcript of this episode is available at academicmedicineblog.org.
Our guest for the hour is psychiatrist Javeed Sukhera. He is the chair of psychiatry at the Institute of Living and chief of psychiatry at Hartford Hospital in Connecticut.
This week our Ask Me Anything segment focused on how to manage the challenges that might come from consuming the news out of Israel and Gaza. Javeed Sukhera, the chair of psychiatry at the Institute of Living and chief of the department of psychiatry at Hartford Hospital, took your calls.
Addressing bias in health-care provision is difficult because the professionals are extremely defensive when confronted with the reality of bias. In this episode of In/Equality, host Debra Thompson speaks with psychiatrist and researcher Javeed Sukhera of the Institute of Living in Hartford, CT, and the Hartford Hospital about his research and teaching on implicit bias. Health-care providers, like all people, have implicit biases that affect the treatment they provide. This conversation explores what these biases are and how they can be dealt with. How does changing implicit bias at the individual level connect to structural changes? Can one inform the other? How much can mandatory training do to root out bias? And how do these issues fit into our already overworked and understaffed health-care system?
Dr Javeed Sukhera talks about kids using social media... how young is too young?
Discuss the concept of implicit stigma and its relevance to healthcare.Describe a model for implicit stigma recognition and management that has been empirically derived through research.Explore ways to co-create systemic change to advance equity and address injustice for vulnerable marginalized and stigmatized patient groups.
Guest Heeyoung Han, PhD, joins hosts Toni Gallo and Research in Medical Education (RIME) Committee members Javeed Sukhera, MD, PhD, and Andres Fernandez, MD, MEd, to discuss new research into the different methodologies used in health professions education research and how rigorous, or not, the descriptions of these methodologies are in published studies. Also covered is advice for researchers who want to more creatively and rigorously conduct and write up their work. A transcript of this episode is available at academicmedicineblog.org. Read the article discussed in this episode: Han H, Youm J, Tucker C, et al. Research methodologies in health professions education publications: Breadth and rigor. Acad Med. 2022;97:S54-S62. Read the complete collection of articles included in the 2022 RIME supplement.
Dr. Javeed Sukhera, Chair of Psychiatry at the Institute of Living. Suicide Awareness Month. in 2020: Suicide was the twelfth leading cause of death overall in the United States, claiming the lives of over 45,900 people
In their exploration of mental health stigma, Sukhera et al. found tension between professionals' heroic public disclosures of vulnerability and private contexts that reward and expect perfectionism. Read the accompanying article to this podcast: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/medu.14790
In recognition of the 200th anniversary of Hartford HealthCare's Institute of Living (IOL) this year, Hartford HealthCare has partnered with the Connecticut Historical Society to present Common Struggle, Individual Experience: An Exhibition About Mental Health. This special podcast series will take us through the history of mental health treatment in Connecticut, and behind the scenes of the IOL, the first psychiatric hospital in the history of Connecticut and the third in the nation.The journey of mental health care through the 19th and 20th century is a fascinating one. The IOL played a significant role in fundamentally changing approaches to mental health – blazing a trail of moral, ethical treatment for others to follow.In episode three, Hartford HealthCare's Steve Coates talks to Dr. Javeed Sukhera, chair of psychiatry at the Institute of Living and chief of the Department of Phychiatry at Harford Hospital.They discuss the current state and rising need of quality mental health access in the U.S., how the IOL has historically pivoted to meet the needs of any given era, and they also look at a future filled with new possibilities in the field of mental health treatment. Check the links in this episode's notes to listen to episodes one and two which feature the Connecticut Historical Society's exhibit and a fascinating conversation with Dr. Hank Schwartz. Be sure to follow Hartford HealthCare on your favorite podcast platform where more episodes focusing on the IOL's history, present and future will publish throughout the year. Just search “Hartford HealthCare” on your favorite podcast platform.The Evolution of Mental Health Care: 200 years at Hartford HealthCare's Institute of Living: Episode One: featuring the Connecticut Historical SocietyEpisode Two: featuring Dr. Hank SchwartzLearn more about Hartford HealthCare's Institute of Living Learn more about Common Struggle, Individual Experience: An Exhibition About Mental Health Presented by Hartford HealthCare Institute of Living
Two Mental Health Doctors in studio discussing the importance of mental health for Adults and our Youth as well.
Law enforcement and the justice system have become increasingly common mental health stakeholders. Mark explores this issue, and how to do better, with psychiatrist Dr. Javeed Sukhera. Then, pioneering mental health and human rights champion Judge Ginger Lerner-Wren stops by to discuss mental health courts, and how she established the first in the United States.
Joining hosts Toni Gallo and Research in Medical Education (RIME) Committee member Javeed Sukhera, MD, PhD, to discuss their research on the experiences of trainees and physicians from minoritized communities in the United States and Canada are Taryn Taylor, MD, MEd, Nicole Rockich-Winston, MS, PharmD, EdD, Tim Mickleborough, PhD, and Tina Martimianakis, PhD. They address creating safe and brave spaces to discuss bias and discrimination, how professional norms may be harmful to those from minoritized communities, and fostering inclusive learning and practice environments. This is the second episode in a 3-part series of discussions with RIME authors about their medical education research and its implications for the field. Find the complete 2021 RIME supplement, which is free to read and download, at academicmedicine.org. Read the articles discussed in this episode: “When No One Sees You as Black”: The Effect of Racial Violence on Black Trainees and Physicians (Re)producing “Whiteness” in Health Care: A Spatial Analysis of the Critical Literature on the Integration of Internationally-Educated Health Care Professionals in the Canadian Workforce A transcript of this episode is available at academicmedicineblog.org.
In this Vital Conversation episode of What London Can Be, we revisit talks given by Dr. Javeed Sukhera, incoming Chair of Psychiatry at the Institute of Living (IOL) and Chief of Psychiatry at Hartford Hospital, and Blair Henry, Harm Reduction Case Manager at Regional HIV/AIDS Connection, about compassion, prejudice, and the importance of connection to health and well-being at Vital Conversation: Be Healthy in 2019.
In this Current Conversation podcast on bias in the Canadian healthcare system, Surgery 101 is joined by Psychiatry and Paediatrics Associate Professor Dr. Javeed Sukhera, who is the incoming Chair of Psychiatry at the Institute of Living (IOL), and Chief of Psychiatry at Hartford Hospital in Connecticut. Hosted by Surgery 101 co-founder Dr. Jonathan White, this podcast episode covers the timely topic of bias, its influence in systems and learning, its visible and invisible impacts, and how to recognize our own bias and address it, something which isn't talked about enough in medical school and residency education. Keep an eye out for future Current Conversations podcast episodes, and let us know what you'd like to hear in a future episode. GET IN TOUCH: DR. JAVEED SUKHERA: Twitter: https://twitter.com/javeedsukhera Website: https://javeedsukhera.com/about SURGERY 101 Website: http://surgery101.org/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/surgery101/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/surgery_101 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/surgery101 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/surgery.101
Dr. Javeed Sukhera, chair of the London Police Services Board and an associate professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at Western University
The Bill Kelly Show Podcast: The Ontario government is shortening the amount of time residents who received an initial dose of Oxford-AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine should wait before getting their follow-up shot. The government had previously said AstraZeneca recipients should wait 12 weeks before getting a second shot, despite shortening the interval for all other vaccines. But it amended the guidance on June 12, joining other provinces in reducing the wait time to eight weeks. The province now says those who received a first jab of the AstraZeneca vaccine should seek their second shot between eight and 12 weeks later, noting those residents can safely use any of the currently approved vaccines for their second dose. ALSO: Canada set to receive 9.5M COVID-19 vaccine doses this week due to Moderna influx. GUEST: Dr. Brian D. Lichty, Associate Professor in Pathology and Molecular Medicine with the McMaster Immunology Research Centre - Canada is set to share 100 million COVID-19 vaccines with the world, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says. Speaking at a press conference at the end of the G7 leader's summit in England on Sunday, Trudeau said Canada will provide funding to the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator, to help 87 million doses be provided to developing countries. Trudeau said “in addition,” the country is donating 13 million doses procured by Canada to other countries through the global vaccine-sharing initiative COVAX. Of those shots, 1.3 million doses will be Johnson&Johnson vaccines, while another 4.1 will be the vaccines manufactured by Oxford-AstraZeneca. All will be bought via COVAX. The remaining 7.3 million doses will be Novovax shots. GUEST: John Kirton, Director of the G7 Research Group with the University of Toronto - Jeff Bennett, former London Progressive Conservative candidate says Canada's major problem, is “lack of exposure, lack of empathy, and lack of understanding about what other people's lived experience might be. And it's because 80 per cent of people who are in position of leadership in this country come from not very diverse backgrounds.” On Wednesday, at nearby Strathroy District Collegiate Institute, an electronic sign read: “215 Lives Lost, Every Child Matters.” Its flags were at half-mast. It was an acknowledgment of another part of Canada's history of racism, brought once again to the fore with the discovery of the remains of 215 children in an unmarked grave in British Columbia, on the grounds of the former Kamloops Indian Residential School. In the wake Sunday's attack in London, there has been a refrain of “this is not who we are” — this is not London, this is not Ontario, this is not Canada. “I think we need to recognize that we have a culture of denialism and avoidance,” said Dr. Javeed Sukhera. “And the human cost of it is too great to continue.” GUEST: Dr. David Hofmann, Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of New Brunswick See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Greg Brady guest hosts 640 Toronto's Morning Show GUEST: Dr. Javeed Sukhera, Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Paediatrics at Western University and board chair of the London police services See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Police charged a man on Monday for hitting an entire family with his truck on Sunday night in London, Ontario, alleging that he did it intentionally because of their Muslim faith. Four members of the Afzaal family died, leaving the only survivor and youngest child, a boy named Fayez, seriously hurt in hospital.An outpouring of grief from the community and across the country followed; a vigil held Tuesday saw leaders from the three major parties speak. But many Muslims say they don't feel safe now, and not for the first time.On the show, we'll hear from two London residents who share their stories about experiencing and witnessing racism in London, and what needs to happen to move the conversation forward on Islamophobia in Canada.Javeed Sukhera is a child psychiatrist, an associate professor at Western University's medical school, and the outgoing chair of the London Police Services Board.Jeff Bennett was the Ontario PC Party candidate for London West in 2014 and wrote about the Islamophobia he witnessed on the campaign trail in a Facebook post that went viral.
A new study conducted in cooperation with SickKids hospital has found that mental health for children and teens is declining due to prolonged experience with isolation, online learning, and the general anxiety a public health crisis brings. We invite youth psychologist Sheri Turrell, child and youth psychiatrist Javeed Sukhera, and Katherine Hay, president and CEO of Kids Help Phone help navigate us through the gravity of the situation and what can be done when the demand for help exceeds the capacity. What is the ability of this cohort to bounce back as the pandemic starts to ease up? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Did you know that 1 in 4 younger people struggle with clinically significant anxiety? Listen as Dr. Javeed Sukhera, a Psychiatrist specializing in Child and Adolescent Mental Health offers advice to families on how to cope and protect their mental health.
The holidays can be a difficult time for many families, but this year will be especially hard with the COVID-19 pandemic. Listen as Dr. Javeed Sukhera, a Psychiatrist specializing in Child and Adolescent Mental Health, offers advice to families on how to cope and protect their mental health.
Javeed Sukhera is an assistant professor at the Schulich School of Medicine's Department of Psychiatry at Western