Janice Graham

 

 

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Winter 2011

  BIOT 5000.03 Advanced Topics in Bioethics: Social Studies of Vaccines 

 

 

 

  

 

Instructor:

Dr. Janice Graham

 

Description:

Vaccines are transnational commodities, developed by multilateral, public-private partnerships, subject to national and international decision-making surrounding scientific safety standards and regulation. This course examines cultural, social, historical, economic, geo-political, technical and ethical features of vaccines into the 21st century. Students will critically track the socio-technical challenges of vaccine discovery, innovation, regulation and implementation across developed and developing countries.

 

 

 

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Winter 2009

 

Instructors:

Dr. Mavis Jones

Dr. Janice Graham 


Description: 
Where do the statistics leave off, and values, attitudes, and practices come in? How do you build a qualitative evidence base? This advanced graduate course will tackle ways of knowing, getting at, and understanding health. It will ground students in the theories, methodologies and methods of qualitative health research. The objective is to provide students with an understanding and demonstrated competence in data gathering techniques, description, interpretation and analysis of health matters. What matters, and what counts? We will examine current methodological and epistemological debates and practices surrounding evidence-based decision making. The course is designed to balance theoretical and practical components in order to meet the needs of graduate students in health disciplines working towards developing their own research project. Students will develop a theoretically sound rationale for their proposed research and gain experience in data collection, fieldwork, analysis and interpretation across a range of methods: participant observation, ethnography, interviewing, and focus groups. Through study and practice, we will as a group explore the strengths and weaknesses of each method. As a graduate student in this course, you will be developing a theoretically and methodologically sound rationale to address a critical issue of interest to you. You are expected to have come to the class with an idea of a project already in mind. During the course you will be applying the readings, exercises and discussions to your own research proposal, which you will present for peer feedback in late March.

Students will be expected to develop critical skills in assessing the merits of, and choosing, qualitative methodologies to address different types of problems. Students will be able, at the course’s end, to identify the value of different ways of knowing in answering health care research questions, and show competence in qualitative research design, data gathering and analysis. We will examine the tensions between qualitative and quantitative methodologies, and the evidence they produce in public health, clinical and community settings. The question of what constitutes relevant and valid evidence in the assessment of health interventions is central to these tensions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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      Past Courses Taught

 

Session
Course
Number
Title
2008 F
 
Introduction to Clerkship
2006 W
Med Residents Ethics & Culture
Introduction to Clerkship: Session on Culture & Ethics
2006 W
CH&E6045.1
BIOT6045.1
Qualitative Methods and Health Research
2004
BIOT 5101.03
Special Topics in Bioethics: Risk
2002-03 F
BIOT 5000

Graduate Research Seminar: Medical Anthropology and Science Studies

2001-02 F
Anth 545A

Palliative Care in Canada (Directed Reading)

2000-01 W
Anth 427

Topics in Medical Anthropology: Science, Technology and Postmodern Bodies

2000-01
Anth 495
Honours Thesis Seminar
2000-01 W
Anth 433
Directed Studies: Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAM)
2000-01 F
Anth 516
Qualitative Methods in Anthropology
1999-00 W
Anth 427

Topics in Medical Anthropology: Science, Technology and Postmodern Bodies

1999-00 F
Anth 516
Qualitative Methods in Anthropology
1999-00 F
DPAS 410A

Doctors, Patients & Society, required first year medical and dental curriculum

1998-99 W
Anth 427

Topics in Medical Anthropology: Science, Technology and Postmodern Bodies

1998-99 W
Anth 516
Qualitative Methods in Anthropology
1998-99 W
DPAS 410A

Doctors, Patients & Society, required first year medical and dental curriculum

1998-99 F
DPAS 410A+B

Doctors, Patients & Society, required first year medical and dental curriculum

1998-99 F
Anth 545A

Palliative Care in Canada (Directed Reading)