Bonnie Stevens – Nursing’s Role in Changing Care Practices and Outcomes in the Context of Health Care System Transformation
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the School of Nursing as part of the 2014 Marion Woodward Lecture. Nurses are positioned ideally to affect patient and family outcomes at both the individual and organizational level. The conceptual and theoretical basis of change and implementation science not only underlies the process of changing health care provider practice but also effectiveness, efficiency, economic and policy outcomes. In this lecture, the clinical problem of acute pain for hospitalized patients will be used as an exemplar to address how research and quality improvement processes can effectively change practices and outcomes. Issues related to evidence, context, facilitation and knowledge translation processes and sustainability will be addressed.
Bio:
Dr. Bonnie Stevens focuses her research on the assessment and management of pain in infants and children, and the effectiveness of knowledge translation strategies to improve child health outcomes. She is the Principal Investigator of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research Team in Children’s Pain, which is researching interactive multifaceted interventions for translating paediatric pain research into practice in eight paediatric hospitals across Canada.
Dr. Stevens is a Professor in the Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing and Faculties of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Toronto. She is the inaugural Signy Hildur Eaton Chair in Paediatric Nursing Research, the first paediatric nursing research chair to be based in Canada. At U of T, Dr. Stevens teaches the Theories of Pain: Impact on the Individual, Family and Society course and will introduce a new course on Implementation Science in Health in 2015. She is also the Director of the University of Toronto Centre for the Study of Pain. At the Hospital for Sick Children, she is the Associate Chief Nursing, Research; Co-Director of the Pain Centre; and a Senior Scientist in the Research Institute.
Select Articles Available at UBC Library
Yamada, J., Stevens, B., Sidani, S., & Watt-Watson, J. (2015). Test of a process evaluation checklist to improve neonatal pain practices. Western Journal of Nursing Research, 37(5), 581-598. doi:10.1177/0193945914524493. [Link]
Stevens, B. (2009). Challenges in knowledge translation: Integrating evidence on pain in children into practice. CJNR (Canadian Journal of Nursing Research), 41(4), 109-114. [Link]
Stevens, B., Yamada, J., Promislow, S., & The CIHR Team in Children’s Pain. (2014). The staying power of change: Sustainability of pain practice improvements after a multidimensional knowledge translation intervention. BMC Health Services Research, 14(2), P118. doi:10.1186/1472-6963-14-S2-P118. [Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
The Legacy of Nutritional Experiments in Residential Schools
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and in partnership with the Faculty of Land and Food Systems, with support from the UBC First Nations House of Learning, the UBC Department of History and Kloshe Tillicum (Network Environments for Aboriginal Health Research). Shortly after WWII, when knowledge about nutrition was still sparse, scientists in Canada took advantage of already malnourished aboriginal communities by using them as research subjects to investigate the effects of different diets and dietary supplements. Evidence of these government-run experiments was brought to the forefront by food historian and UBC History alumnus Ian Mosby, and the research has gained widespread recognition. Sometimes the experiments involved decreasing food intake or withholding supplements. Hundreds of indigenous people across Canada were included in the experiments, of which they had no knowledge, and many of them were children in the Indian Residential School system.
The fallout from this unethical treatment is still having an effect today. Join us for a panel discussion about this distressing era in Canadian history and find out how UBC’s Faculty of Land and Food Systems is working to address issues such as access to healthy, traditional food; food security for all; and land stewardship.
Shortly after WWII, when knowledge about nutrition was still sparse, scientists in Canada took advantage of already malnourished aboriginal communities by using them as research subjects to investigate the effects of different diets and dietary supplements. Evidence of these government-run experiments was brought to the forefront by food historian and UBC History alumnus Ian Mosby, and the research has gained widespread recognition. Sometimes the experiments involved decreasing food intake or withholding supplements. Hundreds of indigenous people across Canada were included in the experiments, of which they had no knowledge, and many of them were children in the Indian Residential School system. The fallout from this unethical treatment is still having an effect today.
Moderator
Jo-Ann Archibald, BEd (Elem)’72 – Associate Dean for Indigenous Education, UBC’s Faculty of Education
Presenter
Ian Mosby, BA’03 – Postdoctoral Fellow, L.R. Wilson Institute for Canadian History, McMaster University
Panelists
Chief Robert Joseph, LLD’03 – Hereditary Chief, Gwawaenuk First Nation; Ambassador for Reconciliation Canada and the Indian Residential School Survivors Society
Eduardo Jovel, MSc’96, PhD’02 – Director, Indigenous Research Partnerships; Associate Professor, Faculty of Land and Food Systems
Jessie Newman – UBC Dietetics student
Gerry Oleman – Member, St’at’imc Nation
Select Articles Available at UBC Library
Archibald, J., Jovel, E., McCormick, R., & Vedan, R. (2006). Indigenous education: Creating and maintaining positive health. Canadian Journal of Native Education, 29(1), 1. [Link]
Archibald, J., Jovel, E., McCormick, R., Vedan, R., & Thira, D. (2006). Creating transformative aboriginal health research: The BC ACADRE at three years. Canadian Journal of Native Education, 29(1), 4-11. [Link]
Wahbe, T. R., Jovel, E. M., García, D. R. S., Llagcha, V. E. P., & Point, N. R. (2007). Building international indigenous People’s partnerships for community-driven health initiatives. EcoHealth, 4(4), 472-488. doi:10.1007/s10393-007-0137-x. [Link]
Jarvis-Selinger, S., Ho, K., Novak Lauscher, H., Liman, Y., Stacy, E., Woollard, R., & Buote, D. (2008). Social accountability in action: University-community collaboration in the development of an interprofessional aboriginal health elective. Journal of Interprofessional Care, 22(S1), 61-72. doi:10.1080/13561820802052931. [Link]
UBC Library Research Guides
UBC Health Information Series and the Life Sciences Institute Present "Drugs, Diet and Genes. Personal Approaches to Treat Diabetes and Obesity"
Learn about the link between obesity and diabetes, current treatment options for type 2 diabetes and how genetics and personalized medicine will inform better treatments in the near future.
This talk is an informal and open forum that aims to bring the latest and greatest ideas in the area of the Life Sciences to the public. Each event is free to attend and will include a talk, networking opportunities and reception. This series focuses on Personalized Medicine and how the Life Sciences Institute faculty, staff and students are working to change clinical practice, improve health outcomes, and reduce health costs. In partnership with the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre’s Health Information Series, an ongoing public lecture series that take place in the Lower Mainland community, this talk will also be recorded for webcast viewing at a later date.
Insulin – The good, the bad and the complicated
Jim Johnson, PhD
Associate Professor, UBC Life Sciences Institute, Diabetes Research Group
Do these genes make me fat?
Susanne Clee, PhD
Assistant Professor, UBC Life Sciences Institute, Diabetes Research Group
New drugs in diabetes
Tom Elliott, MD
Medical Director, BC Diabetes and Associate Professor of Medicine, UBC
Diabetes management: How do I do what my doctor asked me to do?
Gerri Klein, RN, MSN
Certified Diabetes Educator, BC Diabetes
Moderator
Timothy Kieffer, PhD
Group Leader and Professor, UBC Life Sciences Institute, Diabetes Research Group
Wednesday, November 26, 2014, 6:00 – 8:00 p.m.
Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level
Central Library
350 West Georgia Street
To attend this talk, please RSVP online.
For more information about this series, please contact Lee Ann Bryant, Reference Librarian or Allan Cho, Community Engagement Librarian
KEN LUM/CAUSA: CENTRE/SURROUND art exhibition

Ken Lum, Image: The Hnatyshyn Foundation
This exhibition highlights a collaborative interplay of ‘creative’ artist’s practice and ‘purposeful’ curatorial research. The aim of this project is at once affirmative and speculative – it points, persistently, to both a ‘future’ in the ‘past’ and the ‘contemporaneity’ of ‘classical’ Chinese culture.
This exhibition is a curatorial research initiative which addresses an expansive, cross-cultural and trans-generational theme – ‘Chinatown(s) In Motion’.
About the Artist
Ken Lum is an artist born and raised in Vancouver, BC. Lum is co-founder and founding editor of Yishu Journal of Chinese Contemporary Art. Lum has exhibited widely, including Sao Paulo Bienal (1998), Shanghai Biennale (2000), Documenta 11 (2002), Liverpool Biennial (2006), Istanbul Biennial (2007), Gwangju Biennale (2008), Moscow Biennial (2011) and the Whitney Biennial (2014). Lum is also active in public art, realizing permanent works in Vienna, St. Moritz, Edmonton, Vancouver, St Louis, Leiden, Rotterdam, Toronto, and Utrecht. He presently resides in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he is a Professor in the School of Design, University of Pennsylvania.
Curators
Resources
Cheinman, Ksenia. (2012) “CAUSA – Close Connections: A Bibliographic Exhibition.” Alternative Library Spaces. Retrived online on September 17, 2014 at http://alternativelibraryspaces.wordpress.com/2012/01/15/causa-close-connections-a-bibliographic-exhibition/
KEN LUM: CENTRE/SURROUND continues on display from November 1 until November 30. Exhibition space hours are 6am to 1am Monday – Sunday
"Food In Transit" – Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) Menu Exhibition talk by Robert Sung
Culinary historian Robert Sung will be giving a talk in which foodies will take delight. As part of the current exhibition in the Chung Collection room, highlighting historical food menus from the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR), Sung’s talk highlights the historical period of the menus in Canadian history. The menus feature mountains, lakes, forests, Mounties and even some CPR advertising for travel packages to destinations in Canada and around the world.
UBC Library’s Rare Books and Special Collections teamed up with local historian Larry Wong to create the exhibit. Wong, author of Dim Sum Stories, curated a series of menus for the exhibition, “Bon Voyage / Bon Appétit: Menus from the Canadian Pacific Railway Company’s Ships, Trains, Planes, and Hotels.”
UBC Library’s Chung Collection contains more than 1,000 menus, ranging from the 1890s to 1980s. The majority of the menus are in English, but there are a few unique menus in Chinese, Japanese, French and even German. Featuring unique historical delicacies, these menus offer a glimpse of “the elegance of dining” in the early days, says Wong.
The exhibition features CPR menus exclusively, but local foodies can also enjoy a few digitized menus from Vancouver’s Chinatown. Six menus are currently online and there are plans to add more over the summer. The exhibition is currently on display in the Chung Collection exhibition room until the end of 2014.
About the Speaker
Robert (Bob) Sung is currently the President of the Chinese Canadian Historical Society of British Columbia. A Fourth-Generation Canadian, Bob has a passion for culinary arts & history. He was educated at the University of Hawaii for Business Administration and at the Dubrulle Culinary Institute for Professional Culinary Training. For over twenty-‐five years, his personal & business life have revolved around the Food & Hospitality Industry. Bob’s purpose is to educate and entertain from a culinary & cultural approach. In terms of outreach, he is a member of both the Vancouver Chinatown Revitalization Committee, and serves as an advisor to the Asian Heritage Month Society.
Wednesday November 19, 2014, 12.00PM to 1.00PM, Dodson Room (Rm 302), at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Barbara Wildemuth – A Conversation on Mixed Methods Research, With a Focus on Why and How
Tuesday, November 5, 2014 12:00-1.00PM at the Dodson Room (Rm 302), Irving K. Barber Learning Centre.
Potential Longevity: Language and Landscape in the ‘Electronic Information Environment’
LANGUAGE and LANDSCAPE in the ‘Electronic Information Environment’ – November 15, 11.00am to 4.00pm at the Dodson Room (Rm 302), Irving K. Barber Learning Centre.
Morning Session, 11.00AM – 1PM
Ken Lum
Ken Lum was born in Vancouver, Canada but presently resides in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he is a Professor in the School of Design at the University of Pennsylvania. From 2000 to 2006 Ken Lum was head of the graduate program in studio art at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, where he taught from 1990 until 2006. Lum joined the faculty of Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, in 2005 and worked there until 2007. He has been an invited professor at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris, the Akademie der Bildenden Kunst, Munich, California College of the Arts, San Francisco, and the China Art Academy, Hangzhou.
Lum is co-founder and founding editor of Yishu Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art. Lum was Project Manager for Okwui Enwezor’s The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa 1945 – 1994 (2001). He was also co-curator of the 7th Sharjah Biennial (2005), and Shanghai Modern: 1919 – 1945 (2005). Lum has exhibited widely, including São Paulo Biennial (1998), Shanghai Biennale (2000), Documenta 11 (2002), the Istanbul Biennial (2007), and the Gwangju Biennale (2008), Moscow Biennial 2011 and the Whitney Biennial 2014. He has published many essays on art. He has also realized permanent public art commissions for the cities of Vienna, Vancouver, Utrecht, Leiden, St. Moritz, Toronto and St Louis.
Lum turned to conceptual art after receiving his undergraduate degree in science. He drew a great deal as a child, but it was not until he took a course from Vancouver photo-conceptual artist Jeff Wall that the world of contemporary art, beyond traditional drawing and painting, opened up to him. He completed a Master of Fine Arts at the University of British Columbia in 1985. He believes that his lack of early formal art training enabled him to be more receptive to the influences of other conceptual artists, such as Martha Rosler and Dan Graham. Lum asserts that, by the late twentieth century, concepts rather than the artist’s technical skill were most important in creating a work of art. Like many artists of his generation, he uses mass-produced consumer materials, diminishing the boundary between “art” and “popular culture.” Lum rarely fabricates his own art but works with studio photographers and tradespeople on his projects.
Joe Wai
Born in Hong Kong and educated in Vancouver, Joe Wai’sarchitectural career has spanned 35 years and two continents. He worked with both Arthur Erickson and Thompson, Berwick and Pratt in Vancouver as well as Denys Lasdun and Partners and the Greater London Council in London, England. In 1978 he established Joe Wai Architects. His practice is focused on community development, most recently with Hynes Developments’ Seylynn Village in the District of North Vancouver, BC. Joe Wai has been involved with senior/social housing and a volunteer in Chinatown community issues for over 40 years. He is also the architect of the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden, the Chinatown Millennium Gate, the Chinese Cultural Centre Museum and Archives, the Chinatown Parkade and Plaza, and the Commemoration of Block 17 as well as many restorations of the early Chinatown Society buildings. One of Wai’s recent projects is the restoration of the historical Chinese Freemasons Building on the northwest corner of Pender Street at Carrall.
Terrence Russell
For roughly the past ten years, Terrence Russell’s research has focused on the ongoing process of identity definition in Taiwan in the post-martial law era, since 1987. This has been a very complex, multileveled, and politically charged engagement over who is Taiwanese and how Taiwan should understand its own history. Dr. Russell’s earliest work looked at how “nativist” intellectuals attempted to wrest cultural and political capital from the previously dominant (and colonial) Nationalist government and its supporters (mainly post-1949 émigrés from mainland China).
More recently, Russell has turned his attention to relations between the majority Minan Chinese population and the remains of the indigenous Austronesian population. By exploring various forms of cultural production, Professor Russell has looked at how indigenous populations have sought to reclaim a subjective presence in Taiwan. This involves not only challenging the hegemony of the Chinese majority in political and economic areas, but also asserting claims to social and cultural sovereignty. For example, Professor Russell has worked on the involvement of social activism networks, including Indigenous groups, in resisting attempts to remove Amis squatters from their long-established riverbank communities in northern Taiwan.
Afternoon Session – 2.00PM – 4.00PM
Ryo Sugiyama
Ryo is the Curator of Nitobe Memorial Garden. Ryo has a Masters degree in Environmental Science and Landscape Design from National Chiba University’s School of Science and Technology. While there, Ryo studied under Professor Fujii, long noted for his interest in the work of Kannosuke Mori. Mori’s masterwork includes the Nitobe Memorial Garden, completed in 1960.
David Bellman and M. Cynog Evans

Image: Ken Lum, courtesy Vancouver Biennale
This symposium is part of the KEN LUM/CAUSA: CENTRE/SURROUND art exhibition from November 1 to 30, 2014 at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre (2nd level foyer). The exhibition highlights a collaborative interplay of ‘creative’ artist’s practice and ‘purposeful’ curatorial research. The aim of this project is at once affirmative and speculative – it points, persistently, to both a ‘future’ in the ‘past’ and the ‘contemporaneity’ of ‘classical’ Chinese culture.
This exhibition is a curatorial research initiative which addresses an expansive, cross-cultural and trans-generational theme – ‘Chinatown(s) In Motion’.
About the Artist
Ken Lum is an artist born and raised in Vancouver, BC. Lum is co-founder and founding editor of Yishu Journal of Chinese Contemporary Art. Lum has exhibited widely, including Sao Paulo Bienal (1998), Shanghai Biennale (2000), Documenta 11 (2002), Liverpool Biennial (2006), Istanbul Biennial (2007), Gwangju Biennale (2008), Moscow Biennial (2011) and the Whitney Biennial (2014). Lum is also active in public art, realizing permanent works in Vienna, St. Moritz, Edmonton, Vancouver, St Louis, Leiden, Rotterdam, Toronto, and Utrecht. He presently resides in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he is a Professor in the School of Design, University of Pennsylvania.
Curators
Resources
Cheinman, Ksenia. (2012) “CAUSA – Close Connections: A Bibliographic Exhibition.” Alternative Library Spaces. Retrived online on September 17, 2014 at http://alternativelibraryspaces.wordpress.com/2012/01/15/causa-close-connections-a-bibliographic-exhibition/
KEN LUM: CENTRE/SURROUND continues on display from November 1 until November 30. Exhibition space hours are 6am to 1am Monday – Sunday