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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251103
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UID:59877-1762128000-1764547199@socialwork.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:ILCA Workshop: Advance Care Planning and Goals of Care Conversations with Older Adults
DESCRIPTION:AN ONLINE WORKSHOP FOR HEALTHCARE & OTHER PROFESSIONALS \nWhen: Monday\, November 3 – Sunday\, November 30\, 2025\nCost: $240 (Students $120); Sufficient Enrolment Decision Deadline: Mon October 27\, 2025\nThis workshop will be offered only if there is sufficient enrolment. \nAdvance Care Planning (ACP) and Goals of Care (GOC) conversations in health care can be some of the most difficult\, but also the most meaningful and rewarding tasks… Thorough discussions about the values\, hopes\, wishes\, and goals of patients and their families can be challenging to navigate in our fast paced and complex health system. This workshop will provide an overview on the evidence surrounding advance care planning and goals of care conversations with older adults. There will be a focus on practical tools\, case examples\, interprofessional perspectives\, as well as the role of the social determinants of health in these conversations. \nWEEK 1: What are Advance Care Planning and Goals of Care Conversations? \n\nDefine ACP and GOC- Why do they matter so much?\nPerson Centred vs. Treatment Centred GOC Conversations\nReview relevant legislation that impacts these conversations\nUnderstand the role of shared decision making in ACP and GOC conversations\n\nWEEK 2: Interprofessional Perspectives \n\nThe role of the health care team in ACP and GOC conversations\nWho should be present for these conversations and when should they occur?\nDifferences in settings (Hospital\, Community\, Retirement Homes\, Long-Term Care)\nManaging multiple stakeholders (patients\, families\, health care team members)\nCase examples\n\nWEEK 3:  Advance Care Planning and Goals of Care tools \n\nReview of evidence-based tools and interventions for ACP/GOC Conversations for older adults\nHow to adapt tools for your setting.\nCase Examples\n\nWEEK 4: The Role of the Social Determinants of Health and ACP/GOC \n\nWhy do the social determinants of health impact ACP and GOC conversations?\nReview the importance of culture and religion as it impacts ACP and GOC\nAdaptions of tools to promote inclusivity in these conversations\nWho is left out of these important conversations?\nCase examples\n\nInstructors: Bailey Hollister (They/Them)\, MSW\, RSW \nBailey Hollister\, MSW\, RSW is a PhD Candidate in the Aging and Health program at Queen’s University. They have a Master of Social Work from the University of Toronto\, with a specialization in gerontology. Bailey has worked in the past at Sunnybrook Veterans Centre and currently works at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre as a social worker on a transitional care unit. \nVisit the ILCA workshop website for registration information. 
URL:https://socialwork.utoronto.ca/event/ilca-online-workshop-advance-care-planning-and-goals-of-care-conversations-with-older-adults/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:ILCA event
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20251117T121000
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CREATED:20251031T143344Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251031T144802Z
UID:60988-1763381400-1763384400@socialwork.utoronto.ca
SUMMARY:FIFSW Postdoc Talk: "The Evolution of State Fragility: Implications for Social Protection & Public Policy\," with Dr. Luissa Vahedi 
DESCRIPTION:Location: FIFSW Webinar Rm# 422\nRegister by November 13\nAll are welcome. \nAttendees are encouraged to attend in person; however a zoom link will be made available for those who can only attend virtually. If you wish to receive a zoom link to the talk\, please contact Vesna Bajic at vesna.bajic@utoronto.ca. \nJoin FIFSW for a talk by Postdoctoral fellow Dr. Luissa Vahedi\, who will share the concept of state fragility in global health through a decolonial lens\, combining critical theory with longitudinal analyses of global fragility metrics. \nDr. Louissa Vahedi \nAbout the talk\n\nSince the 1990s\, international institutions have labeled many low- and middle-income countries as “fragile states.” These labels shape how we study global health and design interventions\, yet they also carry hidden assumptions about who is capable of good governance and who is not. \nDr. Luissa Vahedi will challenge the neutrality of “fragility” as a concept. Drawing on the idea of damage-centered research\, she will show how measurement and classification systems created by international organizations don’t just describe fragility\, they help produce it. Dr. Vahedi will introduce a new\, globally applicable model of fragility that reveals how governance weaknesses appear across all countries\, not just those traditionally seen as fragile. Using longitudinal data\, she will trace how fragility has evolved worldwide\, uncovering surprising trends in high-income countries that force us to rethink what fragility means and where it resides. \nDr. Vahedi argues for a global health agenda built from the ground up\, one that recognizes hidden vulnerabilities everywhere and reimagines fragility as a shared\, systemic condition rather than a label reserved for the “other”. \n\n\nAbout Dr. Luissa Vahedi\nDr. Luissa Vahedi is a social epidemiologist who specializes in the application and advancement of mixed-methods research to address global health disparities. Her scholarship addresses the socio-political causes and health consequences of social inequalities\, violence\, and child development disparities. Her current research interrogates the concept of state fragility in global health through a decolonial lens\, combining critical theory with longitudinal analyses of global fragility metrics.
URL:https://socialwork.utoronto.ca/event/fifsw-postdoc-talk-the-evolution-of-state-fragility-implications-for-social-protection-public-policy-with-dr-luissa-vahedi/
LOCATION:FIFSW Room 422\, 246 Bloor St\, Toronto\, ON\, M5S 1V4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Postdoc Talks
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