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» Home » News » CREST.BD network recognized by CIHR for transformation in patient engagement

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Communications
UBC Faculty of Medicine
Email: communications.med@ubc.ca
Office: 604.822.2421

CREST.BD network recognized by CIHR for transformation in patient engagement

By dcc2012 | May 23, 2019

The Collaborative Research Team to study psychosocial issues in Bipolar Disorder (CREST.BD) and its leader, Dr. Erin Michalak, were recognized with a Gold Leaf Prize from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) today. CIHR Gold Leaf Prizes acknowledge excellence in translational health research; the prize affirms Michalak’s and CREST.BD’s tremendous leadership in patient engagement initiatives over the past decade.

Erin Michalak, professor in the department of psychiatry

Erin Michalak, professor in the department of psychiatry

CREST.BD engages a wide range of stakeholders — especially those with lived experience — in research into bipolar disorder in order to improve health, quality of life and recovery, establish sound psychosocial interventions and reduce the stigma associated with the condition. By engaging people who live with bipolar disorder as well as their families and health-care teams, Michalak and colleagues have been able to determine where there are current gaps in research, treatment and support and design a research program that promotes the value of patient expertise.

“This award is a statement about how CIHR values effective patient-oriented research, as well as a testament to the remarkable zeitgeist occurring in this area internationally,” said Michalak, a professor in the department of psychiatry at UBC. “We appreciate this acknowledgement of the program we’ve built. Authentic involvement of people with lived experience in research requires creativity, bravery and out-of-the-box thinking on the part of researchers, patient-partners and funders alike. It can take extra time and dedication, but patient-orientated research — done well — can result in science of higher quality and higher impact.”

In Canada, around one per cent of the population — more than half a million people — live with bipolar disorder, a mood disorder characterized by extreme mood swings ranging from depression to mania. It can affect social interactions, energy levels, health and quality of life. People who live with bipolar disorder often experience stigma or discrimination, and up to 15 per cent of people with the condition will die by suicide.

The CREST.BD program began in 2007 as a first-of-its-kind “Community-Based Participatory Research” team to bring researchers, clinicians and people with bipolar disorder together to study psychosocial issues — interrelated social and individual concerns — affecting patients and their communities. Now a nationwide network, CREST.BD is collaboratively asking patient-focused questions in order to advance treatment, care and empowerment for people who live with bipolar disorder, improving their day-to-day lives and effectively changing the landscape of research involvement for people with “expertise by experience” across the country.

CREST.BD was organized around the principal of diverse expertise having equal value, and we’re very proud that this is being recognized by CIHR.

Erin Michalak
network lead, CREST.BD
professor in the department of psychiatry

Moving forward, Michalak wants to take everything her team has learned over the past decade and put it into the pockets of people with bipolar disorder.

“While much of our prior work has been web-based, technology is advancing swiftly and we’re keen to move the knowledge we’ve created on self-management and quality of life into a state-of-the-art mobile application,” said Michalak. “We’re looking at blockchain-based approaches that allow individual users to maximize control over their information and how their data is used. We’d love to move toward unifying the islands of data generated with mobile technology and use the information we gather to inform machine learning applications in order to generate personalized health interventions to help people recently diagnosed with bipolar disorder to make the choices that are right for them.

“CREST.BD was organized around the principal of diverse expertise having equal value, and we’re very proud that this is being recognized by CIHR,” added Michalak. “This has been an incredible opportunity to fully leverage science and knowledge exchange to tangibly improve lives and the Canadian healthcare system.”

Contact Information

Communications
UBC Faculty of Medicine
Email: communications.med@ubc.ca
Office: 604.822.2421
Faculty of Medicine
317 - 2194 Health Sciences Mall
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z3
Tel 604 822 2421
Website www.med.ubc.ca
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