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  • Dr. Mypinder Sekhon appointed Head, UBC Division of Critical Care Medicine

    The Department of Medicine is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Mypinder Sekhon as Head, Division of Critical Care Medicine, for a five-year term effective July 1, 2025. Read More

  • Two Department of Medicine members receive 2025 UBC Faculty of Medicine Distinguished Achievement Awards

    Each year, the Faculty of Medicine recognizes faculty members who have made exceptional contributions in the areas of education, research and/or service, and who are dedicated to advancing both the Faculty’s values and vision of transforming health for everyone. Read More

  • Looking Back: A Retirement Interview Series — Featuring Dr. Jeremy Road

    The UBC Department of Medicine is proud to recognize and celebrate the remarkable career of Dr. Jeremy Road, who officially retired on July 1, 2023, after decades of dedicated service in the Division of Respiratory Medicine at Vancouver General Hospital. Dr. Road’s career has been defined by discovery, collaboration, mentorship, and a deep commitment to […] Read More

  • Celebrating Research Leadership: Dr. Thalia Field and Dr. Kenneth Madden Renew Prestigious UBC Professorships

    The UBC Department of Medicine is proud to announce the renewal of two distinguished professorships, recognizing the outstanding contributions of faculty leaders whose work continues to shape the future of medicine in Canada and beyond. Read More

  • Dr. Anita Palepu Co-Leads Groundbreaking AI and Health Network

    We are proud to share the launch of the new UBC AI and Health Network, co-led by Dr. Anita Palepu, Head of the UBC Department of Medicine, and Dr. Raymond Ng from the Department of Computer Science. Read More

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Dr. John Cairns to receive the Order of British Columbia

June 2, 2014

Dr. John Cairns, Professor of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, has been selected to receive the Order of British Columbia.  The Order of British Columbia recognizes those who have served with the greatest distinction and excelled in their field, benefiting the people of BC or elsewhere. The Order is the highest form of recognition the Province can extend to its citizens, and is only bestowed on the most outstanding British Columbians.

As one of Canada’s most distinguished health researchers, Dr. Cairns has made outstanding contributions to the medical and academic communities in BC and in Canada.  His research focuses on improving the lives of people with heart disease by studying the causes and prevention of heart attacks, as well as the optimal management of patients who have experienced heart attacks. He proved through a multi-centre clinical trial that aspirin can reduce by more than half the incidence of heart attacks and death among patients with unstable angina. This finding revolutionized treatment of these at-risk patients, shifting the focus toward limiting the growth of clots in coronary arteries.

As Dean of Medicine at UBC from 1996 to 2003, he led substantial expansion of facilities, including the UBC Life Sciences Centre and the Diamond Centre at the Vancouver General Hospital. By 2002, the UBC Faculty of Medicine was in second place among its Canadian counterparts in total research funding.  Dr. Cairns also led efforts to double the enrolment of medical students and residents. BC is now educating its own physicians to provide more doctors for the people of BC, rather than depending on other provinces to provide physicians. Much-needed opportunities for rural health training are also being provided.

Dr. Cairns is dedicated to educating, training and mentoring the next generation of physicians in BC.  He continues to teach undergraduate medical students, postgraduate trainees and practicing cardiologists.  He has served on many national health bodies, and is President of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences, the most prestigious organization for health sciences academics in Canada.

 

New research program investigates leading cause of death for women in British Columbia

Karin Humphries, UBC Heart and Stroke Foundation Professor in Women’s Cardiovascular Health

Karin Humphries, UBC Heart and Stroke Foundation Professor in Women’s Cardiovascular Health

The UBC Heart and Stroke Foundation Professorship in Women’s Cardiovascular Health is the first research program in BC to focus on how gender-based differences affect cardiovascular disease.

The Professorship, held by Dr. Karin Humphries, strives to integrate cardiovascular care, education and research for women throughout the province, including rural communities.

Dr. Humphries’ research focus is on the detection and early treatment of cardiovascular disease. She aims to find new ways to improve the education of physicians, women and their families on heart disease and stroke. She will also develop strategies to improve outcomes for women at highest risk, including Aboriginal and South Asian women and those of poor socio-economic status.

“For decades, cardiovascular disease was considered a man’s disease,” Dr. Humphries recalls, “but the reality is that more women are dying of heart disease than men. Although evidence suggests that gender differences can affect the prevalence, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment and outcomes of cardiovascular disease, we haven’t seen enough research in this area of study.”

Dr. Humphries is a leading research scientist at the Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences (CHÉOS) at St. Paul’s and Associate Professor in the Division of Cardiology in the Department of Medicine at the UBC Faculty of Medicine with extensive experience studying gender-related differences in cardiovascular disease. As a professor, she is also a national Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada spokesperson on women’s cardiovascular disease issues.

Researcher seeks to level playing field for Paralympians

March 3, 2014

Andrei Krassioukov, a Professor in the Division of Rehabilitation Medicine, Department of Medicine, is travelling to the 2014 Sochi Paralympic Games to research the effects of spinal cord injury (SCI) on the cardiovascular health of Paralympic athletes. He is a world expert on SCI and its connection to cardiovascular function. He  is also an expert on the practice of boosting – intentional injury – that can increase blood pressure and may improve performance.

What will your research involve and what do you hope to learn?

My team will be holding education-research clinics for wheelchair athletes with SCI, and their coaches, to collect data related to the athletes’ cardiovascular health. Abnormal blood pressure is a common issue for individuals with SCI – it can be either extremely low or extremely high (a condition known as autonomic dysreflexia). There is increasing evidence that cardiovascular functions and specifically blood pressure and heart rate significantly affect wheelchair athletes’ performance. My goal is to ensure International Paralympics Committee classifications take into account the important variable of athletes’ cardiovascular and autonomic dysfunction.

Why would Paralympic athletes intentionally injure themselves to improve performance?

Injury to the spinal cord disrupts control of heart and blood vessels that are normally regulated by the autonomic nervous system that provides non-voluntary control to organs. Following SCI, blood pressure is typically low leading to fatigue and decreased performance. This creates significant disadvantages during competition, leading some athletes to use boosting through intentional injuries as a drastic measure to correct functions lost through injury.

What are the greatest risks of boosting this way?

Boosting is an extremely dangerous practice. Apart from the injuries inflicted, such as overfilling the bladder, fracturing toes or applying electric shocks to testicles, the greatest risk is the sudden spike in blood pressure and heart rate.  The uncontrolled spikes could cause blood vessels in the eye to burst, stroke, heart attack or death.

Why do some athletes still practice this kind of boosting even though it was banned in 1994?

Paralympic athletes are first divided into categories based on disabilities, which determines who they will compete against and what sports they can participate in. They are further divided by the severity of their injuries and placed into an event with similarly challenged competitors.

Under the current system, depending on the sport, some athletes with different disabilities can compete in the same event. This is the motivation for boosting. My hope is that the proposed addition,to the classification–taking into account the athletes’ cardiovascular and autonomic dysfunction–would level the playing field for wheelchair athletes and eliminate the necessity for boosting.

Dr. Krassioukov is co-director of the International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries (ICORD), part of Vancouver Coastal Health Research Institute (VCHRI). He is also a physician-scientist at Vancouver Coastal Health’s GF Strong Rehabilitation Centre.

More information may be found here.

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Department of Medicine
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