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Support our COVID-19 research

Community support fuels important research and education priorities within the Cumming School of Medicine, including our response to COVID-19 and the core infrastructure that enables this work. Giving to the CSM Impact Fund can help minimize the consequences of the pandemic in our community and beyond.

Photo by CDC on Unsplash

Biosafety Level 3 laboratory space key for high-risk virus research

Investigators studying highly contagious and potentially deadly disease-causing microbes need a place to safely perform elements of their research, without the fear of the virus infecting them or escaping through the air. The Cumming School of Medicine is one of only a few locations in Canada with the Level 3 biosafety infrastructure necessary to work with the COVID-19 virus. It re-opened in November 2020 and several investigations into SARS-CoV-2 swiftly launched. Our researchers have been looking at what the virus does within blood vessels, lungs and other organs like the brain — including the causes of ‘long COVID’, a term coined to describe those with persistent symptoms three months after infection. Community support will help take their work to the next level as they collaborate with colleagues around the world to fight COVID-19 and other infectious diseases — so if the next pandemic comes, we’ll be more prepared to deal with it.

Making mental health a priority in challenging times

Fear, isolation and financial struggles related to the COVID-19 pandemic are all potential triggers for anxiety, depression and other mental health symptoms that can have serious long-term effects. Researchers from The Mathison Centre at CSM’s Hotchkiss Brain Institute are working to understand and respond to short, medium and long-term mental health consequences of this environment. New research offers healthcare providers and policy-makers with vital information to help develop and evaluate strategies supporting better mental health outcomes for everyone, with an emphasis on vulnerable children, youth and emerging adults.

Mental health
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Harnessing the power of data for critical decision-making

Insight into preventive actions and the spread of the COVID-19 virus is critical in helping public health leaders respond more effectively to the pandemic. Under the direction of the University of Calgary’s COVID-19 Task Force, the Centre for Health Informatics (CHI) is analyzing critical coronavirus data to guide important decisions by the city and the province. Our expertise in biostatistics, visualization, software engineering, and data analysis – as well as our unique partnership with Alberta Health Services – enabled a live case tracker in less than a week. Projects in data visualization, epidemic and healthcare capacity modelling enable timely evidence-based decisions when they are most urgently needed.