Mona Loutfy | |
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Academic background | |
Education | Bsc, University of Western Ontario MD, Medicine, 1995, University of Toronto MPH, Clinical Effectiveness, 2002, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health |
Academic work | |
Institutions | Women's College Hospital University of Toronto |
Mona R. Loutfy is a Canadian clinician-scientist and infectious disease specialist.
Loutfy earned her Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Western Ontario and her medical degree from the University of Toronto. [1] Following this,she completed her Internal Medicine Residency in 1999 and her Infectious Diseases Fellowship in 2001 at the University of Toronto. Loutfy then did a Master's of Public Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in 2002 and a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at McGill University. [2]
Upon leaving McGill,Loutfy joined the faculty at Women's College Hospital where she led the creation of the Women and HIV Research Program. She was also recognized by Ministry of Research,Innovation and Science with an Early Researcher Award in 2008. [3] The following year,Loutfy and her research team began focusing on promoting reproductive health in HIV-positive women in Ontario. Her team found that out of nearly 4,000 HIV-positive women of reproductive age in Ontario,69 per cent who are in their reproductive years want to get pregnant. They subsequently published the first accurate measurement of the need to help HIV-positive women in Ontario have children,including developing provincial and national pregnancy clinical planning guidelines for people with HIV. [4]
In August 2016,Loutfy was appointed the leader of the Canadian HIV Women’s Sexual and Reproductive Health Cohort Study (CHIWOS). The study aimed at documenting the experiences of more than HIV-positive women living in Ontario,Quebec,British Columbia,Saskatchewan,and Manitoba. [5] She also visited two First Nations communities four times a year to see patients and work with communities to address their HIV epidemic. [6] While serving in this role,she was also the recipient of a Canadian Association for HIV Research and the Canadian Foundation for AIDS' Research Excellence in HIV Research Award. [7] The following year,Loutfy and her CHIWOS research team published a study finding that HIV-positive women felt their health needs were lacking in areas around pregnancy planning,Pap testing,mammograms and psychological well-being. [8]
In March 2018,Loutfy helped lead the revision of the Canadian HIV Pregnancy Planning Guidelines which included "36 recommendations to provide clinical information and recommendations for health care providers' counselling and care." [9] On May 3,Loutfy was promoted to the rank of Full professor at the University of Toronto's Department of Medicine. [10]
The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases is one of the 27 institutes and centers that make up the National Institutes of Health (NIH),an agency of the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). NIAID's mission is to conduct basic and applied research to better understand,treat,and prevent infectious,immunologic,and allergic diseases.
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre (SHSC),commonly known as Sunnybrook Hospital or simply Sunnybrook,is an academic health science centre located in Toronto,Ontario,Canada. It is the largest trauma centre in Canada and one of two trauma centres in Toronto,the other being St. Michael's Hospital. Sunnybrook is a teaching hospital fully affiliated with the University of Toronto. The hospital is home to Canada's largest veterans centre,in the Kilgour Wing and the George Hees,which cares for World War II and Korean War veterans.
The Women's Interagency HIV Study (WIHS) was established in August 1993 to investigate the impact and progression of HIV disease in women. he WIHS enrolls both HIV-positive and HIV-negative women. The core portion of the study includes a detailed and structured interview,physical and gynecologic examination,and laboratory testing. The WIHS participants are also asked to enroll in various sub-studies,such as cardiovascular,metabolic,musculoskeletal,and neurocognition. New proposals for WIHS sub-studies are submitted for approval by various scientific investigators from around the world.
Although almost no research existed on the role of women in Angolan society in the late 1980s,there are a few generalities that could be drawn. In rural Angola,as in many African economies,most of the population engaged in agricultural activities. Women performed much of the agricultural labor. Marriage generally involved familial,political,and economic interests as well as personal considerations and gains. The household was the most important unit of production and was usually composed of several generations. The women grew and prepared most of the food for the household and performed all other domestic work. Because of their major role in food production,women shared relatively equal status with men,who spent much of their time hunting or tending cattle.
HIV/AIDS was first detected in Canada in 1982. In 2018,there were approximately 62,050 people living with HIV/AIDS in Canada. It was estimated that 8,300 people were living with undiagnosed HIV in 2018. Mortality has decreased due to medical advances against HIV/AIDS,especially highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART).
Anita Rachlis,M.D. is a Canadian HIV/AIDS researcher and is the principal author of the HIV treatment guidelines in Canada. She is an associate scientist at the Sunnybrook Research Institute,Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre,in Toronto,Ontario,Canada.
Catherine S. Peckham FFPHM is a British paediatrician.
HIV in pregnancy is the presence of an HIV/AIDS infection in a woman while she is pregnant. There is a risk of HIV transmission from mother to child in three primary situations:pregnancy,childbirth,and while breastfeeding. This topic is important because the risk of viral transmission can be significantly reduced with appropriate medical intervention,and without treatment HIV/AIDS can cause significant illness and death in both the mother and child. This is exemplified by data from The Centers for Disease Control (CDC):In the United States and Puerto Rico between the years of 2014–2017,where prenatal care is generally accessible,there were 10,257 infants in the United States and Puerto Rico who were exposed to a maternal HIV infection in utero who did not become infected and 244 exposed infants who did become infected.
Quarraisha Abdool Karim is an infectious diseases epidemiologist and co-founder and Associate Scientific Director of CAPRISA. She is a Professor in Clinical Epidemiology,Columbia University,New York and Pro-Vice Chancellor for African Health,University of KwaZulu-Natal,South Africa.
Gillian Einstein is a faculty member at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health and the Department of Psychology at the University of Toronto,and holder of the inaugural Wilfred and Joyce Posluns Chair in Women's Brain Health and Aging.
Barbara Anne Croy is a Canadian reproductive immunologist and professor emerita in Biomedical and Molecular Sciences at Queen's University. From 2004 until 2016,Croy was a Canada Research Chair in Reproduction,Development and Sexual Function. In 2017,she was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. Her research focus is on mice pregnancy and natural killer cells.
Jeannette R. Ickovics is an American health and social psychologist. She is the inaugural Samuel and Liselotte Herman Professor of Social and Behavioral Sciences at the Yale School of Public Health and Professor of Psychology at the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Yale University. She was the Founding Chair of the Social and Behavioral Sciences at the Yale School of Public Health and the Founding Director of Community Alliance for Research and Engagement (CARE). She served as the Dean of Faculty at Yale-NUS College in Singapore from 2018-2021.
Samira Mubareka is a Canadian microbiologist who is a clinical scientist at the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto,Ontario. Her research considers the influenza virus,viral transmission and aerobiology. During the COVID-19 pandemic Mubareka isolated the genome of Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 in an effort to improve detection and diagnostics. She served as a member of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table.
Eleanor N. Fish is a Canadian immunologist who is a Professor of Immunology at the University of Toronto. Her research considers how cytokines and chemokines interact with receptors in cells and tissue. During the COVID-19 pandemic,Fish tested interferon-alpha as a treatment for coronavirus disease.
Müge Çevik is a physician who is an infectious diseases researcher and science communicator at the University of St Andrews. Her research considers HIV,viral hepatitis,emerging infections and tropical infections in developing countries. During the COVID-19 pandemic,Çevik was an advisor to the Chief Medical Officer of Scotland and the World Health Organization,and is a member of New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group - an expert committee of the UK Department of Health advising Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies.
Sharon Louise Hillier is an American microbiologist. She is the Richard Sweet Endowed Chair in Reproductive Infectious Disease and vice chair of the department of obstetrics,gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) and Magee-Women's Research Institute.
Kelly Anne Gebo is an American epidemiologist and infectious disease specialist. She was the inaugural Vice Provost for Education at Johns Hopkins University and served as the Chief Medical and Scientific Officer for the All of Us Research Program at the National Institutes of Health.
Deborah M. Money is a Canadian obstetric and gynaecological infectious disease specialist. As a professor at the University of British Columbia,she was the first non-US President of the Infectious Diseases Society for Obstetrics and Gynecology from 2010 until 2012.
Simone Natalie Vigod is a Canadian scientist,Head of the Department of Psychiatry at Women's College Hospital and Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Toronto in Toronto,Ontario,Canada. She focuses her research on perinatal mood disorders and has conducted some of the largest studies worldwide on maternal mental illness around the time of pregnancy.
Padmaja (PJ) Subbarao is a Canadian respirologist and scientist in physiology and experimental medicine. She is a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Pediatric Asthma and Lung Health at the University of Toronto and the Associate Chief of Clinical Research at SickKids Hospital.
Mona Loutfy publications indexed by Google Scholar