Tracey O'Sullivan

 Tracey O'Sullivan

Tracey O'Sullivan

  • Courses5
  • Reviews20

Biography

University of Ottawa - Health Science


Resume

  • 2007

    University of Ottawa

    University of Ottawa

    Queen's University

    Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

    University of Victoria

    Master's degree

  • Program Evaluation

    Public Health

    Collaborative practice and engagement

    Community Resilience

    Research

    Disaster and Emergency Management

    Science

    Community Based Participatory Approach

    Qualitative Research

    Health Promotion

    Psychology

    Health Services Research

    Business Resilience

    We don’t have a back-up plan: An exploration of family contingency planning following stroke

    Louise Lemyre

    Agatha Stanek

    Andrea Ghazzawi

    We don’t have a back-up plan: An exploration of family contingency planning following stroke

    Christine Fahim

    Michael Falconi

    Protecting and Supporting High Risk Populations in Pandemic: Drawing From Experiences with Influenza A (H1N1)

    Louise Lemyre

    The EnRiCH Community Resilience Framework for High-Risk Populations. PLOS Currents Disasters

    Darene Toal-Sullivan

    Unraveling the complexities of disaster management: A framework for critical social infrastructure to promote population health and resilience

    Supports for Health and Social Service Providers from Canada Responding to the Disaster in Haiti

    Darene Toal-Sullivan

    Use of the Structured Interview Matrix to Enhance Community Resilience Through Collaboration and Inclusive Engagement

    Tracey O'Sullivan is an Associate Professor in the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences

    Faculty of Health Sciences

    at the University of Ottawa. She obtained her masters degree from the University of Victoria and her PhD from Queen's University. She worked as a Senior Research Associate at the University of Ottawa's Institute of Population Health

    prior to starting her faculty appointment in 2007. \n\nTracey's research program focuses on support mechanisms to promote health and resilience in conditions of high personal

    occupational and community stress

    with particular emphasis on building capacity for emergency management through community engagement

    multi-disciplinary collaboration

    and strengthening of critical social infrastructure. She is the lead investigator for The EnRiCH Project (www.enrichproject.ca)

    which is a community-based participatory research project focused on enhancing resilience and preparedness among high risk populations

    using a functional capabilities framework. Tracey recently received an Early Researcher Award from the Ontario Ministry of Economic Development and Innovation for her work on Salutogenic Indicators for Organizational Resilience.

    Tracey

    O'Sullivan

APA 2111

4.5(2)

HSS 2101

3.5(1)

HSS 2102

2.7(7)

HSS 2104

3.1(5)

HSS 4101

3.5(5)