ĢƵ

Rising to the occasion

Post-doctoral and graduate students win prestigious grants to support RISE3 LAB research projects

Five graduate students working in the RISE3 LAB at the Ingram School of Nursing under the supervision of Assistant Professor Guillaume Fontaine were awarded highly competitive grants from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR) and/or the Fonds de recherche du Québec (FRQ) for their research projects.

The mission of the (Research in Implementation Science for Healthcare Engagement, Effectiveness and Equity) is to apply and advance implementation science methods to drive the transformation of healthcare systems, prioritizing engagement with communities, healthcare providers, decision-makers and other key actors.Congratulations to:

Véronique Thibault, RD, PhD, MSc, Postdoctoral Fellow in the RISE³ LAB at the Ingram School of Nursing (Supervisor: Guillaume Fontaine, RN, PhD; Co-supervisor: Dr. Caroline Quach, Université de Montréal) received an Fonds de recherche du Québec (FRQ) Postdoctoral Award (2025–27; $90,000; ranked 1st in committee) for her project titled “Optimizing Infection Prevention and Control Practices: An Evidence Synthesis and Matrixed Multiple Case Study Approach Using Implementation Science and Integrated Knowledge Translation.”

Sophie Sergerie-Richard, RN, MSc, Co-Advised PhD student in the RISE³ LAB (Supervisor: Marie-Hélène Goulet, RN, PhD, Université de Montréal; Co-supervisor: Guillaume Fontaine, RN, PhD) received both an FRQ Doctoral Award ($145,000; 2025–29) ranked 1st in committee) and a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Doctoral Award ($120,000; 2025–28) for her project titled “De-Implementation of Coercive Practices in Mental Health Care.”

Daniel N. Elakpa, BPharm, MSc, PhD student in the RISE³ LAB (Supervisor: Guillaume Fontaine, RN, PhD) received a CIHR Canadian Network on Hepatitis C (CanHepC) Doctoral Award ($140,000; 2025–29) for his project titled: “Implementing decentralized hepatitis C virus (HCV) point-of-care testing for people who inject drugs in Montreal: An evidence synthesis and multi-site process-mapping study to inform the development of an implementation blueprint.”

Olivia Di Lalla, RN, BSN, Master of Science (Applied) student in the RISE³ LAB (Supervisor: Guillaume Fontaine, RN, PhD) received a CIHR Master’s Award ($27,000; 2025–26) for her project “Exploring the Feasibility, Benefits, and Risks of Integrating AI Across the Implementation Research Spectrum to Accelerate the Translation of Public Health Interventions.”

Talia Meyers, BA, Master of Science (Applied) student in the RISE³ LAB (Supervisor: Guillaume Fontaine, RN, PhD) received a CIHR Master’s Award ($27,000; 2025–26) for her project titled “Advancing Hepatitis C Elimination: Evaluating Barriers, Facilitators, and RE-AIM Outcomes of Point-of-Care Testing in the Métropoles Sans Hépatite C Initiative.”

Photo, left to right: Véronique Thibault, Talia Meyers, Daniel Elakpa, Olivia Di Lalla, and Sophie Sergerie-Richard.

Back to top