In 2020, my team harmonized data collection on COVID-19 tested patients across 50 emergency departments in eight provinces (BC, AB, SK, MB, ON, QC, NS, NB). We linked registry data with administrative data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information and provincial data. We captured >206,000 consecutive eligible patients, published 25 manuscripts, and provided aggregate data to Public Health to inform decision-making. In 2023, we pivoted our network, allowing us to leverage the infrastructure to host studies and create registries for non-COVID-related work. We renamed our network the Canadian Emergency Department Research Network (CEDRN, www.cedrn.com). CEDRN has established data linkage agreements, privacy and institutional approvals, governance, committees, collaborations, human resources, and knowledge translation strategies to implement registries and databases describing clinical care in areas relevant to emergency medicine. In 2024, CEDRN received CIHR funding to create an opioid registry to help address the Toxic Drug Crisis, and in 2025, to ensure research readiness for pandemics and health emergencies in emergency medicine. Established datasets can be used by trainees for graduate student work.
My research group is working with Ministry to develop, implement and evaluate a new provincial medication safety information technology we have developed. This work will provide multiple opportunities for graduate students to be involved in. With the implementation of this technology more robust data will become available on adverse drug events experienced by patients. Future projects include the development of methods to conduct sentinel surveillance of adverse drug events, and studies in comparative drug safety and effectiveness.