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Document Description
Title
Mental
health
and
illness
research
funding
in the
Canadian
Institutes
of
Health
Research
-
the
first
10
years
-
a
quantitative
analysis
Author
Kelland
,
Jeff
R.
(Jeff
Ralph)
,
1958-
Description
Thesis
(M.Sc.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2010.
Medicine
Date
2010
Pagination
ix, 138 leaves : col. ill.
Subject
Canadian
Institutes
of
Health
Research.
Institute
of
Neurosciences
,
Mental
Health
and
Addiction;
Psychiatry--Research
grants--Canada;
Psychiatry--Research--Canada;
Psychiatry--Canada--Databases;
Subject.MESH
Psychiatry--economics--Canada;
Research;
Degree
M.Sc.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Faculty of Medicine
Discipline
Medicine
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references
(leaves
124-138).
Abstract
But
does
it
necessarily
follow
, that his
task
is
to
take
possession
of
existing
science
to
bring
it
to
increasing
degrees
of
generality
, and to
proceed
, from
condensation
to
condensation
, to what has been
called
the
unification
of
knowledge?
Henri
Bergson
,
1911
--
The
main
objective
of this
research
is
an
examination
of the
funded
research
database
of the
Canadian
Institutes
of
Health
Research
(CIHR)
to
determine
, and
graphically
illustrate
,
funding
levels
of
mental
health
and
illness
research
(MHIR)
at
CIHR
as
compared
to
other
health
research
, and
relative
funding
allocations
within
the
MHIR
set
of
research
projects.
As
our
main
federally
funded
health
research
body
,
CIHR's
funding
allocations
can
be
used
as an
indicator
of
Canada's
health
research
priorities.
This
research
objective
is
pursued
with a
three-part
research
question:
(i)
what
proportion
of
health
research
funded
by
CIHR
from
1999
to
2009
was
allocated
for
MHIR;
(ii)
how
much
of this
can
be
considered
mental
health
research
versus
mental
illness
research;
and
(iii)
how
much
of this
is
neuroscientific
research
versus
non-neuroscientific
research?
--
This
is
an
in-depth
analysis
of
CIHR's
funded
research
database;
in
particular
, a
scrutiny
of the
abstracts
of
all
projects
funded
by the
Institute
of
Neurosciences
,
Mental
Health
and
Addiction
at
CIHR
in its
first
10
years
, and of
all
neuroscientific
,
mental
health/illness
and
addiction
related
research
funded
in
other
virtual
institutes
and
programs
of
CIHR
over
the
same
period.
Detailed
data
sets
with
information
on
all
relevant
research
projects
are
studied;
dollar
value
,
program
type
and
research
classification
of
each
project
are
recorded;
and
each
is
categorized
according
to its
research
objective(s).
Pursuit
of the
present
study's
research
objective
demands
a
methodological
design
driven
primarily
by
analysis
of the
data
itself.
This
heuristic
process
unfolds
according
to what
is
found
, and
produces
results
on
multiple
levels
with
tabular
and
graphic
illustrations
when
necessary.
A
clear
and
practicable
distinction
between
mental
health
research
and
mental
illness
research
is
employed
, and the
implications
of this
distinction
for the
study's
research
method
are
explored.
--
The
results
point
to
one
overriding
conclusion:
Ostensibly
,
MHIR
as a
whole
is
adequately
funded
at
CIHR
, but there
is
ample
evidence
that
allocations
within
MHIR
may
not
satisfactorily
address
all
the
concerns
falling
under
its
extensive
mandate.
In
particular
,
mental
illnesses
may
well
be
under-funded
and
under-researched.
Thus
closer
scrutiny
of
CIHR's
funding
allocations
within
its
MHIR
,
both
quantitative
and
qualitative
,
is
required
on a
number
of
levels.
Based
on the
extensive
but
nevertheless
preliminary
nature
of the
present
study
,
further
research
could
ultimately
call
into
question
the
perceived
sufficiency
of
CIHR's
overall
funding
of
MHIR.
--
Recommendations
for
future
research
are
derived
from
two
principal
sources:
1)
the
methodological
challenges
met
in the
course
of the
analysis
and its
results;
and
2)
the
unexpected
limitations
discovered
in
generating
the
results.
The
value
of the
findings
for
mental
health/illness
advocacy
and for
CIHR
itself
is
discussed
, as
well
as the
influence
of
CIHR's
funding
allocation
policies
, or
lack
thereof
, on the
quality
and
quantity
of the
MHIR
it
conducts.
This
leads
to
consideration
of
Canada's
level
of
commitment
to this
research
area
,
particularly
in
light
of the
burden
and
prevalence
of
mental
illness
in
Canada
, and the
fundamental
importance
of
mental
health.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a3475085
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(17.98
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Kelland_JeffR.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
65485.cpd