About the Canadian Neonatal Network™
The Canadian Neonatal Network™ is a group of Canadian researchers
who collaborate on research issues relating to neonatal care.
The Network was founded in 1995 by Shoo Lee, MBBS, FRCPC,
PhD and now includes members from 27 hospitals and 16 universities
across Canada. The Network maintains a standardized neonatal
intensive care unit (NICU) database and provides a unique
opportunity for researchers to participate in collaborative
projects on a national and international scale. Health care
professionals, health services researchers and health administrators
participate actively in clinical, epidemiologic, outcomes,
health services, health policy and informatics research aimed
at improving efficacy and efficiency of neonatal care. Research
results are published in Network reports and in peer-reviewed
journals.
Mission
"To be a network of Canadian researchers who conduct leading
multi-disciplinary, collaborative research dedicated to the
improvement of neonatal-prenatal health and health care in
Canada and internationally"
Special Goals
- Establish a national network of multi-disciplinary Canadian researchers interested in neonatal-perinatal research
- Establish and maintain a truly national neonatal-perinatal database and provide the infrastructure to facilitate collaborative research
- Longitudinally study outcomes and variation in medical care that increases costs but does not improve outcomes. This is important because NICU care is one of the largest components of child health expenditures and exhibits large variations in mortality, morbidity and costs.
- Develop innovative research methods that can lead to improvement in health and quality of healthcare.
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