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Walking the Talk: Dr. Daniel Fuller on Urban Health and Mobility

Researchers Under the Scope

Release Date: 06/23/2024

Not Just Numbers: Vaidehee Lanke Tracks Opiate Use & Perinatal Health show art Not Just Numbers: Vaidehee Lanke Tracks Opiate Use & Perinatal Health

Researchers Under the Scope

In this episode, medical student and researcher  shares what large provincial datasets reveal about opioid use disorder, maternal mental health, and pregnancy. Armed with data, she hopes better support —before, during, and after birth—can change outcomes for mothers and babies.   Lanke spent her summer working with epidemiologist  and the Saskatchewan Population Health and Evaluation Research Unit on a pan-Canadian project tracking opioid use in perinatal populations across five provinces. “The question we set out to answer was: What is the association between...

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Cross-Linked Clues: Jack Walther on Depression and Alzheimer's show art Cross-Linked Clues: Jack Walther on Depression and Alzheimer's

Researchers Under the Scope

As a student, Jack Walther's friends often came to him when they needed a listening ear, or help with relationship struggles. This summer, Walther took his fascination with the brain and mood disorders to , learning to untangle some of the tiny molecular threads that might explain why depression so often shows up alongside dementia. Walther and the research team dug into the physical interactions between serotonin and the beta amyloid peptides that build up in patients with Alzheimer's disease. . He admits going from the classroom to the laboratory felt like a sharp learning curve. "It was...

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EEEV-ident Passion: Eve Simpson on Doubt, Persistence and Viral Spread show art EEEV-ident Passion: Eve Simpson on Doubt, Persistence and Viral Spread

Researchers Under the Scope

Eve Simpson knows from experience scientific research doesn’t always follow a linear path. In the first of three student research episodes, the fourth-year biochemistry, microbiology and immunology student looks back at a summer spent decoding Eastern Equine Encephalitis Virus (EEEV) in ’s lab. Simpson said she loved doing bench research, but felt frustrated in the moments where she hit setbacks and moments of doubt. “I felt like I was letting everyone down,” she said. “But everyone I spoke to said they'd been through that. It's part of being a researcher. That's what drives us to do...

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That’s So Metal: Dr. Jessica Sheldon Targets Acinetobacter Baumannii show art That’s So Metal: Dr. Jessica Sheldon Targets Acinetobacter Baumannii

Researchers Under the Scope

Jessica Sheldon (PhD) is on a mission to starve out Acinetobacter baumannii —one of the world’s most virulent hospital-borne pathogens. Notorious for its speedy evolution and multi-drug resistance, the hospital-borne bacteria lingers on dry surfaces and infects critically-ill patients, leading to sepsis, pneumonia and high mortality rates. In this episode, delves into the real-life events that drove her to investigate histamine, and its role in bacterial survival and immune response. In 2022, Sheldon joined the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Medicine as an assistant professor...

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Fluid Endeavour: Kirk Haan's Medical Balancing Act show art Fluid Endeavour: Kirk Haan's Medical Balancing Act

Researchers Under the Scope

Kirk Haan graduated from high school, thinking he’d study pharmacy at the University of Saskatchewan, and walk out five years later. After one summer at a pharmacy, Haan realized he was after a more ‘hands-on’ career in medicine. “I’ve kind of worked with my hands my whole life, just between rummaging around on a farm and always kind of building things,” he said.  “Now it’s using them to help people in a direct way.” Then, Haan found his passion — inside the laboratory. In 2018, Haan landed a summer position in , studying osmoregulation — the mechanisms that govern...

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Dr. Sébastien Gauvrit: Fishing for Answers in Vascular Development show art Dr. Sébastien Gauvrit: Fishing for Answers in Vascular Development

Researchers Under the Scope

Sébastien Gauvrit (PhD) was only ten when his family let him have his first tank of guppies. Within weeks, he was hooked. “I actually had to understand genetics directly by mixing these different fish together to get the colour or fin shape I was interested in,” said the vascular biologist and genetic modelling pioneer. From his home in France, to post-doctoral work pioneering new models for vascular disease in Germany, to his current position as an assistant professor of Anatomy, Physiology and Pharmacology at the University of Saskatchewan’s College of Medicine —  tropical fish...

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Dr. Stu Skinner & Mobile Medicine: Halting Syphilis & HIV show art Dr. Stu Skinner & Mobile Medicine: Halting Syphilis & HIV

Researchers Under the Scope

Stuart Skinner (MD) knew something was wrong three years ago, when patients started coming to him with vision loss, fever, rashes, and meningitis. Almost every case could be traced back to untreated syphilis — a sexually transmitted infection with caseloads exploding 1,200 per cent from 2017.  Saskatchewan saw this spike just as Covid-19 entered the picture. “With the pandemic, testing dropped dramatically,” Skinner said, noting this , often travelling alongside HIV. Syphilis often spreads through sores, and can remain unnoticed for months or years on end, making early detection...

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Peptide Puzzle: Dr. Yi-Chun Chen on Early Markers for Diabetes and Obesity show art Peptide Puzzle: Dr. Yi-Chun Chen on Early Markers for Diabetes and Obesity

Researchers Under the Scope

Yi-Chun Chen (PhD) is taking a close-up look at some of the body’s hardest-working cells — the ones often processing an overabundance of modern-day food and nutrients. “From an evolutionary point of view, our cells are not designed to deal with that,” said Chen, who joined the department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Pharmacology at the University of Saskatchewan last year as an assistant professor. She said our bodies are pushed into churning out large amounts of insulin rapidly after snacks and meals, “which makes the beta cells work extra hard.” Raised in Taiwan and inspired by...

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In the Trenches: Dr. James Stempien on Emergency Medicine show art In the Trenches: Dr. James Stempien on Emergency Medicine

Researchers Under the Scope

James Stempien (MD) has navigated some of the most challenging corners of emergency medicine, from the frigid isolation of Inuvik to the bustling corridors of Saskatoon’s emergency departments.  His experience in low-tech outposts has shaped his approach to modern emergency care.   “When things aren’t going well you see it in the emergency department first,” Stempien said. “We’re the front door. We’re always open.”   As provincial department head of emergency medicine, Stempien sees patients on their worst days in hospitals bursting at the seams, struggling to...

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All’s Not Lost: A Roadmap to Treating Hepatitis C on the Prairies show art All’s Not Lost: A Roadmap to Treating Hepatitis C on the Prairies

Researchers Under the Scope

As the world aims to eradicate hepatitis C (HCV) by 2030, Carrielynn Lund and Dr. Alexandra King’s team created a how-to guide.  is a step-by-step guide to tackling a spike of new infections across the three Canadian prairie provinces. Hepatitis C (HCV) causes severe liver disease, and was notoriously difficult to treat until the introduction of direct-acting antivirals a decade ago — antivirals which boast a remarkable 95% success rate. Despite this advancement, Lund and Dr. King say Saskatchewan, Alberta and Manitoba need to know why HCV cases keep rising, particularly in...

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As an undergrad, Daniel Fuller didn’t have a car, nor was he keen on taking the bus. 
 
“I rode my bike to university every day in the fall and then just kept on going and never stopped,” said Fuller, a former national and international canoe/kayak athlete.
 
As he pedaled, Fuller watched the way people used trails, sidewalks and roads.
 
“I really started to get into active transportation, how people move around cities and how we can get people active -- outside of the sport environment,” said Fuller, now an associate professor in Community Health and Epidemiology at the University of Saskatchewan.
 
Fuller moved to Montreal for his doctorate as the city launched its bicycle-taxi program. 
 
After the widespread installation of shared-use bicycles, Fuller observed no changes in collisions or crashes. However, a significant number of people started to combine biking with walking, and public transit.
 
Fuller said Montreal succeeded because the city went big, launching more than 5,000 rental bicycles at 405 docking stations.
 
“They work on network effects: people being able to find them, people being able to use them, and integrate them with their mobility,” said Fuller. 
 
His goal is to link active transportation in urban planning to measurable gains in public health outcomes.
 
“If we implement a bike lane, how much health benefit is there? Or how many health dollars might we save? Because health care is our biggest expenditure provincially, and if we can save money on health, then that's really, really important.”
 
For almost everyone, Fuller said five to ten more minutes of walking each day would be “extremely beneficial.”
 
“It improves mental health, reduces depression, improves type 2 diabetes, improves chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and prevents certain forms of cancer,” he said. 
 
Technology plays a big role in Fuller’s work. From 2016-2022, he was a Canada Research Chair in Population Physical Activity at Memorial University, and he remains a Principal Investigator on the INTERventions, Research, and Action in Cities (INTERACT) team. 
 
He’s studied wearable devices to assess their accuracy, and how much they motivate people to stay physically active. 
 
“The jury's kind of out on that," said Fuller, who noted Fitbits and Apple Watches tend to give users an initial activity boost, which fades after a year or two. 
 
Instead, he said population density is far more effective in raising the number of minutes people move each day. 
 
Fuller said city planners rely on traffic counts to decide whether or not an intersection should be expanded or changed — but there’s virtually no information to accurately quantify sidewalk use, or the health costs of urban sprawl.
 
As the co-principal investigator of the CapaCITY/É Healthy Cities Implementation Science Team, he’s trying to get a detailed handle on why some cities succeed with active transportation, while others struggle. 
 
"There’s a whole political hierarchy,” said Fuller. “Who's paying, how much are they paying, how fast does it have to happen, all these kinds of questions that we don't have good generalized kind of science about yet.”