Health News For South West

Send to a Friend

Friday, April 28, 2006
The University fo Western Ontario
Sexual Dysfunction, Proteins and Health Care Management: New Canada Research Chairs Announced at Western

London, ON. – Studies of sexual dysfunction, health care management and proteomics are the focus of three new Canada Research Chairs (CRC) named today at The University of Western Ontario. Cell biologist Lique Coolen, Biochemist Shawn Li and Richard Ivey School of Business professor Greg Zaric were among the newest CRCs announced nationally in Québec City this morning.

“A Canada Research Chair is one of the most prestigious academic awards a researcher in this country,” says Ted Hewitt, Western’s Vice-President (Research and International Relations). “Our Chairs are recognized as leaders in their fields and their collaborations, which span the globe, help to provide answers to some of the world’s most pressing scientific and social questions, while enhancing southwestern Ontario’s profile as a centre of research excellence.”

Lique Coolen, CRC in Neurobiology of Motivation and Reward, leads studies examining the neural systems that regulate sexual motivation and reward. She is developing new therapeutic tools for sexual dysfunction and, by comparing structural and molecular changes in the brain that result from sexual reward with those caused by exposure to drugs, she hopes to better understand the process of drug addiction. “Behaviour is shaped by rewarding and aversive experiences,” says Coolen, who comes to Western from the University of Cincinnati. “I am looking at exactly how the brain translates these reinforcing events into the motivation to express behaviour.”

Greg Zaric, CRC in Health Care Management Science, is using novel mathematical and economic models to better understand resource allocation and cost-effectiveness in health care. In Ontario alone, more than 20,000 people are waiting for joint replacement surgery. Wait times can already exceed one year and, with an aging population, demand for this type of surgery is only expected to grow. Zaric is examining such issues as directing patients out-of-province for surgery and testing several policy options that could lessen the burden on our health care system. “This research will inform policy makers about how to use limited health care budgets,” he says. Zaric is also developing mathematical models which explore the relationship between injection drug use and the HIV epidemic in order to determine which programs and strategies are most cost-effective.

Shawn Li, CRC in Functional Genomics and Cellular Proteomics, is exploring how proteins encoded in the human genome are interconnected within cells and how disruptions in protein networks can lead to the onset of disease. His research will lead to novel strategies for disease diagnosis and treatment. “This research promises to provide unique insights into the pathophysiology of human diseases and to identify drug candidates that target aberrant sub- networks rather than individual proteins,” he says.

The Canada Research Chairs program is a federal program that plays a critical role in recruiting and retaining top research talent in Canada.

Contact Information:
• Lique Coolen, Departments of Anatomy & Cell Biology and Physiology & Pharmacology, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry: 519- 661-2111 ext 80285 or lique.c oolen@schulich.uwo.ca
• Greg Zaric, Richard Ivey School of Business, 519-661- 3415 or gzaric@ivey.ca
• Shawn Li, Department of Biochemistry, 519-850-2910 or sli@uwo.ca
• Douglas Keddy, Research Communications Coordinator, 519-661-2111, ext 87485 or dkeddy@uwo.ca

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Local Health Care News   Top

Stroke Resources Rehabilitative Care in Ontario Living A Healthy Life