News

The Future of Public Health in BC – join the dialogue!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 3rd , 2017

FUTURE OF PUBLIC HEALTH IN BC

BRITISH COLUMBIA – The Public Health Association of BC is non-partisan, voluntary, non-profit, member driven organization that provides leadership to promote health, well-being and social equity. From a public health perspective, social, economic, and environmental conditions should promote optimal health, and all citizens have a right to opportunities for success and prosperity.

PHABC has partnered with PlaceSpeak a digital platform whose mission is to facilitate legitimate and defensible online citizen engagement processes by connecting the digital identity of participants to their physical location.

The coming Provincial election is an opportunity for general public and public health professionals in BC to advocate for policies that will improve the health of the population. Click here to link to PlaceSpeak.

PHABC is interested in speaking with all British Columbians about their interest in the future of healthy public policy, public health services and ensuring that we have conditions that support health for all.

For more information about PHABC’s activities or to find out more about #InvestInPublicHealth contact:

Shannon Turner

PHABC Executive Director

execdir@phabc.org

(250)595-8422

@pha_bc

PHABC Celebrates Past President Paola Ardiles Award

Paola

SFU health sciences lecturer Paola Ardiles is honoured by the Surrey Board of Trade for social trailblazing with a Women in Business award. March 9, 2017

Health sciences lecturer honoured as social trailblazer

SFU health sciences lecturer Paola Ardiles has been honoured with a 2017 Surrey Board of Trade Women in Business award for her role as a community “social trailblazer.”

The annual awards recognize the work of Surrey’s businesswomen and their contributions to the community. Ardiles is cited for contributing to myriad public health areas including mental health promotion, health literacy, cultural competency, immigrant and refugee health and women’s mental health.

Ardiles provides mentorship and supervision for students interested in the public health field. She recently co-designed the new Health Change Lab at SFU Surrey, in partnership with SFU’s Radius Social Innovation Lab, Beedie School of Business.

The Health Change Lab launched as an experiential program to help students co-design innovative and entrepreneurial solutions to complex social/health problems in partnership with City of Surrey, Fraser Health Authority and various community partners.

Such partnerships ensured that students were working with mentors and coalitions to support priority areas identified by the Surrey community, such as food security, active transportation for seniors, mental health and substance use issues.

This past week her fourth-year students participated in the Surrey arm of Metro Vancouver’s Homeless count and saw first-hand the impact of homelessness and poverty.

“I’m incredibly honoured to receive this award, and will continue to work with our students and community partners towards solutions to our most urgent public health issues,” says Ardiles, who shared the award with her two co-nominees, Jen Temple of the Trademark Group and Alice Sundberg of Surrey’s Poverty Reduction Coalition.

Paola Ardiles paying tribute to her co-nominees, Alice Sundberg of Surrey’s Poverty Reduction Coalition and Jen Temple of the Trademark Group.

Paola Ardiles paying tribute to her co-nominees, Alice Sundberg of Surrey’s Poverty Reduction Coalition and Jen Temple of the Trademark Group.

Paola Ardiles and Surrey Board of Trade speaker and SFU alumna Margaret Trudeau

Paola Ardiles and Surrey Board of Trade speaker and SFU alumna Margaret Trudeau

Ardiles has placed a particular focus on youth engagement and leadership development over the last few years. In 2015, she launched a social media campaign for youth and with youth to answer the questions of why and how to best engage youth in global health policy development.

Ardiles joined SFU’s Faculty of Health Sciences in 2013 to design and teach a new curriculum on health promotion in the Canadian context for the Master of Public Health program. The same year, she founded Bridge for Health (B4H), a local and global network focusing on social innovation to promote health and wellbeing.

Since forming the network, Ardiles has worked to engage students, academics, professionals and organizations to share their talents, ideas and solutions in the B4H creative space. She also created an advisory group of global research and policy experts, whose initial report instigated the creation of a youth symposium at the World Health Organization’s international conference in Shanghai last fall.

For the past eight years, she has been a board member of the Public Health Association of BC and is past president of the non-for-profit organization, which advocates for healthy public policies. Her collaborative efforts led to the first public dialogue between the business sector and B.C.’s public health community, the first of its kind in Canada.

The idea of using sustainable business practices as a force for good health led her to enrol in SFU’s part-time MBA program in Surrey to study the concept. That led to the recent launch of the Bridge for Health Cooperative, to support businesses to design healthy social and physical environments in the workplace.

In 2016, Bridge for Health piloted its Well-being at Work Innovation Labs in Surrey with some local businesses as part of a Surrey Board of Trade event. The co-op will be implementing the labs in Brazil in May 2017.

The awards luncheon feature speaker, Margaret Trudeau, an SFU outstanding alumni award recipient, praised the work of all the award nominees.

SFU Chancellor Anne Giardini, Paola Ardiles, V-P External Relations Joanne Curry and Surrey campus Executive Director Steve Dooley.

SFU Chancellor Anne Giardini, Paola Ardiles, V-P External Relations Joanne Curry and Surrey campus Executive Director Steve Dooley.

Run to Quit: Help people achieve a smoke-free life!

The 10-week training program is available online and in-person:

  • Virtual clinics start April 17, 2017
  • In-store clinics at select Running Room locations start either March 27 or April 1, 2017

Locations, dates and registration can all be found on the Run to Quit webpage.

Our goal is to support people who want to quit smoking. A brief overview of Run to Quit is below as a refresher and available on our Youtube channel.

What is Run to Quit?

Run to Quit is an innovative quit-smoking program that pairs the quitting expertise of the Canadian Cancer Society with Running Room’s learn to walk or run 5km clinics. Participants are supported by a trained coach through a gradual 10-week program in combination with evidence-based smoking cessation strategies.

Greg, a former smoker and 2016 Run to Quit participant, shares his story about how Run to Quit helped him go smoke-free.

 Why promote Run to Quit?

Run to Quit greatly increases a person’s chances of quitting smoking while raising their physical activity level. Six months after the program ended in 2016, 40% of participants interviewed reported being non-smokers and 43% were still running three times a week. No other smoking cessation program offers both these health benefits!

How to promote Run to Quit

We have several ways to promote the program, including through posters, social media, sharing our Youtube videos, tear pads and general information sheets. If you are interested in sharing program materials let me know who your audience is, as well as the channels through which you will promote, and I can provide the best and most specific tools to help.

And be sure to follow us on social media!

Facebook page:  www.facebook.com/RuntoQuitCanada

Twitter: @RunToQuit

Fellowship in Health System Improvement – University of AB (School of Public Health)

With Canada’s health system performance trailing behind many other countries, there is now a critical need for leaders who bring about transformative change. The Fellowship in Health System Improvement, offered by the University of Alberta’s School of Public Health, provides a unique mix of learning and action-oriented experiential opportunities over six weekend sessions.

The fellowship is designed for current leaders and senior managers in health systems looking to increase their knowledge of health and health system performance, enhance personal and organizational leadership skills, build their understanding of international health systems and develop the ability to lead transformative change.  For more information: 

The Kinder Morgan Pipeline: An unhealthy choice for B.C. – Vancouver Observer

As the City of Vancouver and the Tsleil-Waututh, Squamish, and Coldwater First Nations prepare to take legal opposition to the project, members of The Public Health Association of BC (PHABC) are voicing their concerns about the health impacts of the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion (TMX) project.

To read the full article written by PHABC members Amy Lubik and Trevor Hancock  in the Vancouver Observer