SPE Talks

SPE Talks

A wake-up call for sleep policies with Dr. Julie Carrier

50 min · 14 de ene de 2024
portada del episodio A wake-up call for sleep policies with Dr. Julie Carrier

Descripción

One out of every three people in Canada is not getting sufficient sleep. Many willingly trade their zzz's with all-nighters, Netflix binges, endless scrolling through social media, and to conform with the prevailing sleeplessness trend in modern culture. But sleep is not a luxury, for those dealing with sleep disorders, socioeconomic sleep disparity, or individuals with irregular working hours, such as pilots and healthcare workers. Compromising sleep to be productive is counterproductive. It compromises many cognitive functions and risks road and industrial accidents, medical errors and multiple disorders resulting in significant financial burdens on governments annually. Sleep research can play a crucial role in informing various policies, addressing issues like inadequate training for healthcare professionals to identify sleep disorders early, regulating shiftwork hours, and daylight savings, and tackling sleep health disparities. Despite having ample evidence, the translation of sleep research to society is on snooze. Listen from Dr. Julie Carrier, professor in the Department of Psychology at Université de Montréal, provides insights into the needs, barriers, and solutions for bridging the gap between sleep and circadian rhythm research with society. She explains the federal efforts of the Canadian Sleep and Circadian Network and provincial efforts in Quebec of Réseau Sommeil in developing strategies for integrating sleep and circadian rhythms into public health and policies. Highlights of the meeting organized by the Canadian Sleep and Circadian Network, can be found here: National strategy on the integration of sleep and circadian rhythms into public health research and policies: Report from the Canadian Sleep and Circadian Network. Find out more information about the Réseau Sommeil at reseausommeil.ca Upcoming SPE event: What: With the support of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO, join Science & Policy Exchange at a public forum event on policies and emerging technologies shaping the future of Canada's carbon emissions. When and where: February 7th 2024 at 5:30 PM ET over Zoom. Link to register Past SPE event What: With the support of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO: EDI in Action: Inspiring BIPOC across the Canadian science policy landscape. The discussion centered on the challenges BIPOC may face and how EDI is being promoted in the field. Where: Link to YouTube recording. - Interview by Madhura Lotlikar- Script writing by Madhura Lotlikar, with input by Maïa Dakessian, Gloria Lau, and Antoine Zboralski- Audio edition by Madhura Lotlikar with input by Gloria Lau, Maïa Dakessian, and Jonathan Caballero- Podcast production by Jonathan Caballero

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6 episodios

episode Urban planning, Artificial Intelligence, and inclusive cities - An interview with Rashid Mushkani artwork

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In this episode we discuss how artificial intelligence can be used to design public spaces that are not only efficient, but also address the diverse needs of the communities they serve. This podcast is brought to you by the team of Science and Policy Exchange - learn more at https://www.sp-exchange.ca/ [https://www.sp-exchange.ca/]  We sincerely thank Rashid Mushkani for this valuable discussion and we acknowledge the contributions of the team that made this podcast episode possible: * Interview by Zahra Soar * Script writing by Zahra Soar, with the support of Cassandra Johannessen, Gloria Lau, and Jonathan A. Caballero * Audio Editing by Jacob Van Oorschot * Executive production by Jonathan Caballero  If you have any comments or would like to share with us topics that you would like to learn about in the podcast, please reach us at contact@sp-exchange.ca [contact@sp-exchange.ca ]

16 de jun de 202538 min
episode An interview with Paul Dufour, professor at the Institute for Science, Society and Policy of the University of Ottawa artwork

An interview with Paul Dufour, professor at the Institute for Science, Society and Policy of the University of Ottawa

In this episode, SPE volunteer Cissy Suen interviews Paul Dufour, who is an expert on Canadian science policy and a past board member of SPE, about his blog piece on a 1973 senate committee report on science policy in Canada and how that relates to Canadian science policy today. The links to the editorial as well as a book recommendation by Paul can be found below. Editorial piece by Paul Dufour in the CSPC editorial series:https://sciencepolicy.ca/posts/senate-committee-releases-its-full-report-on-a-science-policy-for-canada-and-provides-recommendations-for-renewed-government-organization/ [https://sciencepolicy.ca/posts/senate-committee-releases-its-full-report-on-a-science-policy-for-canada-and-provides-recommendations-for-renewed-government-organization/] Paul's recommended book from this episode: First Principles: The Crazy Business of Doing Serious Science, by Howard Burton [https://www.amazon.ca/First-Principles-Business-Serious-Science/dp/1554701759] ----- Don't miss our upcoming SPE events: * ‘EDI in Action : Inspiring Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) across the Canadian science policy landscape.' will be held virtually on October 12th, 2023 at 5:30 PM EST in collaboration with the Canadian Commission for UNESCO. The registration page can be found here:https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIocOmvqTojHdFgLWV-yv479Pwn9YN3VfsH#/registration [https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIocOmvqTojHdFgLWV-yv479Pwn9YN3VfsH#/registration] This podcast is brought to you by the team of Science and Policy Exchange - learn more at https://www.sp-exchange.ca/ [https://www.sp-exchange.ca/] We sincerely thank Paul Dufour for this valuable discussion and weacknowledge the contributions of the team that made this podcast episode possible: - Interview by Cissy Suen - Script writing by Madhura Lotlikar and Gloria Lau - Audio edition by Noa Kemp- Podcast production by Jonathan A. Caballero

9 de jun de 202533 min
episode A wake-up call for sleep policies with Dr. Julie Carrier artwork

A wake-up call for sleep policies with Dr. Julie Carrier

One out of every three people in Canada is not getting sufficient sleep. Many willingly trade their zzz's with all-nighters, Netflix binges, endless scrolling through social media, and to conform with the prevailing sleeplessness trend in modern culture. But sleep is not a luxury, for those dealing with sleep disorders, socioeconomic sleep disparity, or individuals with irregular working hours, such as pilots and healthcare workers. Compromising sleep to be productive is counterproductive. It compromises many cognitive functions and risks road and industrial accidents, medical errors and multiple disorders resulting in significant financial burdens on governments annually. Sleep research can play a crucial role in informing various policies, addressing issues like inadequate training for healthcare professionals to identify sleep disorders early, regulating shiftwork hours, and daylight savings, and tackling sleep health disparities. Despite having ample evidence, the translation of sleep research to society is on snooze. Listen from Dr. Julie Carrier, professor in the Department of Psychology at Université de Montréal, provides insights into the needs, barriers, and solutions for bridging the gap between sleep and circadian rhythm research with society. She explains the federal efforts of the Canadian Sleep and Circadian Network and provincial efforts in Quebec of Réseau Sommeil in developing strategies for integrating sleep and circadian rhythms into public health and policies. Highlights of the meeting organized by the Canadian Sleep and Circadian Network, can be found here: National strategy on the integration of sleep and circadian rhythms into public health research and policies: Report from the Canadian Sleep and Circadian Network. Find out more information about the Réseau Sommeil at reseausommeil.ca Upcoming SPE event: What: With the support of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO, join Science & Policy Exchange at a public forum event on policies and emerging technologies shaping the future of Canada's carbon emissions. When and where: February 7th 2024 at 5:30 PM ET over Zoom. Link to register Past SPE event What: With the support of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO: EDI in Action: Inspiring BIPOC across the Canadian science policy landscape. The discussion centered on the challenges BIPOC may face and how EDI is being promoted in the field. Where: Link to YouTube recording. - Interview by Madhura Lotlikar- Script writing by Madhura Lotlikar, with input by Maïa Dakessian, Gloria Lau, and Antoine Zboralski- Audio edition by Madhura Lotlikar with input by Gloria Lau, Maïa Dakessian, and Jonathan Caballero- Podcast production by Jonathan Caballero

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3 de feb de 202327 min
episode The 2022 Canadian federal budget and what it means for research and innovation artwork

The 2022 Canadian federal budget and what it means for research and innovation

In this episode we interview science journalist Brian Owens (@BL_Owens) about the 2022 Canadian federal budget and what it means for Canadian research, development and innovation, including the creation of a new innvation agency. You can read more about it in the following article which our guest has recently written for Nature. To read more of Brian's work, check out his website here. Following last month's special which focused on Ukraine, we'll ask Dr. Richard Sandbrook from the Munk School of Global Affairs and Science Policy about the Science for Peace organization based at the University of Toronto and about the role that scientific collaboration has to play in promoting peace internationally, particularly in the context of the current Russian-led war on Ukraine. You can also connect with Science for Peace on Instagram (@science_4_peace) and Facebook. Finally, Anne Barker from the National Research Council of Canada will tell us about the Arctic and Northern Challenge Program which aims to address the pressing issues identified by northern peoples as impacting their quality of life. No upcoming events were reported in this episode -- we wish all our listeners a great summer holiday!

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