Â鶹AV

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Facilities

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Facilities

The following facilities are associated with the Â鶹AV health sciences.

Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2021-2022 (last updated May. 20, 2021) (disclaimer)

Buildings

Buildings in the Faculty of Medicine

  • 680 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal QC H3A 0B8
  • This building houses the Ingram School of Nursing, its faculty, staff, and students. The three topmost floors provide office space, student lounge areas, classroom settings, and learning laboratories for the School. The offices of Undergraduate Medical Education and Postgraduate Medical Education, the offices of Interprofessional Education and Distributed Medical Education, the Social Accountability and Community Engagement Office, and the Medical Education Systems are also located in this building.
  • 772 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal QC H3A 1G1
  • The Administrative Excellence Centre (AEC #3) is located in this building.
  • 1010 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal QC H3A 2R7
  • The Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Â鶹AV Office, the University Advancement Office and Building Services are located in this building.
  • 3605 de la Montagne Street, Montreal QC H3G 2M1
  • This building, built in 1925, comprises the administrative offices of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. The Réseau Universitaire Intégré de Santé et Services Sociaux (RUISSS) Â鶹AV and the Indigenous Health Professions Program are also located in this building.
  • 3647 Peel Street, Montreal QC H3A 1X1
  • This building houses the Department of Social Studies of Medicine and the Biomedical Ethics Unit.
  • 4920 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West, Suite 301, Westmount QC H3Z 1N1
  • The Â鶹AV Molson Informatics Unit is located in this building.
  • 5100 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West, Suite 720, Montreal QC H4A 3T2
  • The Gerald Bronfman Department of Oncology and two Administrative Excellence Centres (AEC #7 and #9) are located in this building.
  • 5252 de Maisonneuve Blvd. West, Suite 400, Montreal QC H4A 3S5
  • The Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences is located in this building.
  • 5858 Côte-des-Neiges Road, Suite 300, Montreal QC H3S 1Z1
  • The Department of Family Medicine and the Administrative Excellence Centre (AEC #4) are located in this building.
  • Bellini Building
  • 3649 Promenade Sir William Osler, Montreal QC H3G 0B1
  • Completed in 2008, this building was expressly designed to encourage cross-disciplinary research across the health sciences fields, including the Â鶹AV Research Centre on Complex Traits and Structural Biology Centre. The atrium is a must see for its wood paneling and the remarkable artwork Des soleils et des cellules.
  • Cancer Research Building
  • 1160 Pine Avenue West, Montreal, QC H3A 1A3
  • Also completed in 2008, this building rose from the bedrock of Mount Royal, it is the home of the Rosalind & Morris Goodman Cancer Research Centre. Its large glass windows attest to the core philosophy of exchange amongst researchers and between researchers and the public. Do not miss Le Retour, the public artwork rising at the front of the building.
  • Charles Meredith House
  • 1130 Pine Avenue West, Montreal QC H3A 1A3
  • This elegant building, built for Charles Meredith, houses the Institute for Health and Social Policy.
  • Davis House
  • 3654 Promenade Sir-William-Osler, Montreal QC H3G 1Y5
  • Built in 1909 for contractor James T. Davis, this heritage building houses the administrative and faculty offices and teaching facilities of the School of Physical and Occupational Therapy.
  • Duff Medical Building
  • 3775 University Street, Montreal QC H3A 2B4
  • Opened for use in 1924, the building is situated on the northeast corner of University Street and Pine Avenue. It is occupied by the Pathology Department, the Department of Biomedical Engineering, the Department of Microbiology and Immunology, the Sheldon Biotechnology Centre, and the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Communications Office.
  • Hosmer House
  • 3630 Promenade Sir-William-Osler, Montreal QC H3G 1Y5
  • Built in 1901, for Ogilvie Flour Mill founder Charles Hosmer, this heritage building houses the administrative and faculty offices and teaching and research facilities of the School of Physical and Occupational Therapy.
  • Hosmer House Annex
  • 3541 de la Montagne, Montreal QC H3G 2A2
  • Built in 1901, for Ogilvie Flour Mill founder Charles Hosmer, this heritage coach house is home to the teaching facilities of the School of Physical and Occupational Therapy.
  • Hugessen House
  • 3666 McTavish Street, Montreal QC H3A 1Y2
  • This building houses two Administrative Excellence Centres (AEC #1 & #2).
  • Irving Ludmer Psychiatry Research and Training Building
  • 1033 Pine Avenue West, Montreal QC H3A 1A1
  • In 1943, a large building and site were donated as a basis for the development of an Institute of Psychiatry. The building was reconstructed to permit the establishment of a 50-bed unit, together with extensive research laboratories, and opened in 1944. In 1946, the first day hospital in the world was opened at the Institute, and in 1953, a 50-bed wing was added. In 1985, another wing, housing in-patient services, psychology, and occupational therapy, was added. The Irving Ludmer Psychiatry Research and Training Building of the Department of Psychiatry was built by Â鶹AV in 1963, providing an extensive and modern research facility.
  • Lady Meredith Annex
  • 3706/3708 Peel Street, Montreal QC H3A 1W9
  • This annex is the new on-campus social space for medical students, complete with computers, study desks, sofas, and other furnishings, and also houses the WELL Office (Wellness Enhanced Lifelong Learning).
  • Lady Meredith House
  • 1110 Pine Avenue West, Montreal QC H3A 1A3
  • This building houses the Institute of Health Sciences Education (formerly known as the Centre for Medical Education) and the Faculty Development Office.
  • Macdonald-Stewart Building
  • 21111 Lakeshore Rd., Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue QC H9X 3V9
  • This building, completed in 1978, houses the administrative offices and laboratories for the School of Human Nutrition and the Faculty of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.
  • Â鶹AV Genome Centre
  • 740 Doctor Penfield Avenue, Montreal QC H3A 0G1
  • The Â鶹AV Genome Centre (MGC) is a state-of-the-art integrated research environment providing Canadian and international researchers with high-throughput technologies and cutting-edge approaches to enable next-generation “-omics†research, driving breakthroughs in medical and life sciences research.
  • The MGC currently employs over 220 staff and students, including 14 Â鶹AV Faculty members with world-renowned expertise in the fields of molecular and computational genomics, genetic epidemiology, population genetics, and complex disease genomics. As a founding member of the Canadian Genomics Enterprise (CGEn), the MGC operates one of the largest fleets of next-generation sequencing (NGS) instrumentation in Canada and is a prominent national hub for genome sequencing and other omics technologies.
  • The Montreal node of the Canadian Centre for Computational Genomics (C3G) is also based in the MGC. C3G role is providing bioinformatics analysis services and HPC services for the life science research community.
  • The MGC is also home for the Centre of Genomics and Policy (CGP). The CPG works at the crossroads of law, medicine, and public policy. Applying a multidisciplinary perspective and collaborating with national and international partners, the CGP analyzes the socio-ethical and legal norms influencing the promotion, prevention and protection of human health.
  • The Â鶹AV Genome Centre's infrastructure and expertise have fostered many trend-setting global initiatives and international collaborations, leading important advances in genomics research and to improved population health.
  • Â鶹AV Life Sciences Complex
  • 3649 Promenade Sir-William-Osler, Montreal QC H3G 0B1
  • 1160 Pine Avenue West, Montreal QC H3A 1A3
  • The Life Sciences Complex encompasses four interconnected buildings: McIntyre Medical Sciences, Stewart Biology, Francesco Bellini, and Cancer Research. The last two buildings are state-of-the-art facilities that bridge the first two. The Complex houses a dozen core facilities, 2,000 researchers, postdoctoral fellows, undergraduate and graduate students, and technical personnel in its 340,000 square feet. The Administrative Excellence Centre (AEC #10) is located in this complex.
  • McIntyre Medical Sciences Building
  • 3655 Promenade Sir-William-Osler, Montreal QC H3G 1Y6
  • This 15-storey building, completed in 1965, is home to the Departments of Biochemistry, Physiology, and Pharmacology and Therapeutics, a section of the Rosalind and Morris Goodman Cancer Research Centre, and the Â鶹AV Cystic Fibrosis Translational Research Centre. It also houses the Department of Medical Information Technology (MedIT) and the Research and Graduate Studies Offices. The Osler Library of the History of Medicine has been temporarily relocated to the McLennan-Redpath Library Complex (see mcgill.ca/library). The building boasts various learning spaces such as large amphitheatres and several interactive-learning rooms. The recently renovated cafeteria offers both fresh food and a bright environment with a lounge on the side.
  • Morrice House
  • 1140 Pine Avenue West, Montreal QC H3A 1A3
  • This building houses the Clinical and Health Informatics Research Group.
  • Place Mercantile
  • 2001 Â鶹AV College Avenue, Montreal QC H3A 1G1
  • This building, located at the corner of Â鶹AV College Avenue and Sherbrooke Street, houses the Faculty of Dentistry's administrative offices, teaching laboratories, and classrooms, as well as the Oral Health and Society Research Group. The building is also home to the Undergraduate Teaching Clinic (formerly at the Montreal General Hospital), the School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, two Administrative Excellence Centres (AEC #11 & #12), the Office for Continuing Professional Development (CPD), and the Office of Accreditation and Education Quality Improvement for the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences.
  • Purvis Hall
  • 1020 Pine Avenue West, Montreal QC H3A 1A2
  • Purvis Hall, one of several old mansions in the historic “Golden Square Mile†of Montreal, is situated at the corner of Peel Street and Pine Avenue. This building is dedicated to the administrative offices, teaching, and research activities of the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health.
  • Rabinovitch House
  • 3640, rue de la Montagne, Montreal QC H3G 2A8
  • This building houses the Centre for Research on Brain, Language, and Music, and the research facilities of the School of Physical and Occupational Therapy.
  • Les Galeries du Parc Mall (La Cité)
  • 3575 Park Avenue, Suite 5640, Montreal QC H2X 3P9
  • The Steinberg Centre for Simulation and Interactive Learning (SCSIL) plays a vital role in the training of health care students, residents, and practitioners at Â鶹AV. Located in the lower level of the Galeries du Parc mall, the SCSIL occupies 31,000 square feet of space, including a technical skills area, a high-fidelity simulation suite, 10 clinical encounter rooms, a simulated patient ward, a hybrid operating room, a virtual reality trainer room and a simulated apartment. In our risk-free and technologically-immersive simulated clinical environments, learners can safely practice procedural and communication skills, and engage in interprofessional team training to gain valuable expertise. Through world-class simulation-based education, research, and innovation, we aim to provide the best possible health care to the communities we serve.
  • Strathcona Anatomy and Dentistry Building
  • 3640 University Street, Montreal QC H3A 0C7
  • This building, opened in 1911, houses the research wet laboratories and the research administration of the Faculty of Dentistry, the offices and laboratories of the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, the Â鶹AV Programs in Whole Person Care and the Polypeptide Hormone Laboratory. The Maude Abbott Medical Museum is also located in this building.
  • Campus Outaouais
  • 200-525, boul. de l'HoÌ‚pital, Gatineau (Québec) J8V 3T4
  • Depuis plus de 30 ans, l’Université Â鶹AV, le CISSS de l’Outaouais et les autorités régionales qui ont précédé le CISSS collaborent à renforcer la capacité du réseau de santé en Outaouais. Les étudiants en médecine et médecins résidents qui ont la possibilité de faire l’ensemble de leur formation en Outaouais sont plus susceptibles de tisser des liens durables dans la région et de choisir de s’y établir pour exercer.
  • 1988: Â鶹AV et le conseil régional de la santé (aujourd’hui le CISSS de l’Outaouais) commencent à former des résidents mcgillois en Outaouais et la même année, l’Unité de médecine familiale (UMF) de Gatineau (aujourd’hui devenue un groupe de médecine familiale universitaire) ouvre ses portes.
  • 2003: Le ministère de la Santé et des Services sociaux crée les réseaux universitaires intégrés de santé (RUIS, aujourd’hui devenus les RUISSS, ou réseaux universitaires intégrés de santé et de services sociaux), ce qui consolide encore davantage les liens de Â鶹AV avec l’Outaouais. Le RUISSS Â鶹AV a pour mandat de faciliter l’accès aux soins spécialisés, à l’enseignement médical et à la recherche médicale dans son territoire désigné, qui inclut l’Outaouais ainsi que plusieurs autres régions du Québec, de la Montérégie au Nunavik.
  • 2010: Le programme d’externat intégré de Â鶹AV en Outaouais accueille sa première cohorte.
  • 2020: Ouverture du Campus Outaouais de Â鶹AV, qui permet aux étudiants de suivre les quatre ans du programme d’études médicales de premier cycle (programme MDCM) de la Faculté, ainsi que leur résidence, en français, en Outaouais.
  • L’enseignement de la médecine et la formation en résidence en Outaouais bénéficient d’une implication importante des différents spécialistes (médecine de famille, chirurgie, médecine interne, psychiatrie, pédiatrie, obstétrique, gynécologie, gériatrie, dermatologie, cardiologie, néphrologie, orthopédie, neurochirurgie, chirurgie vasculaire et médecine d’urgence).
  • Visitez le site web du Campus pour plus de renseignements: mcgill.ca/campusoutaouais/.
  • For the past thirty years, Â鶹AV, the CISSS de l’Outaouais and the CISSS’ predecessors have worked together to help improve the regions’ health care capacity. Offering students the opportunity to study medicine and complete their residency training in Outaouais encourages them to set down roots and establish their medical practice in the region.
  • 1988: Â鶹AV and the region’s health authority (today the CISSS de l’Outaouais) start training Â鶹AV residents and, in the same year, the Gatineau Family Medicine Unit, now a University Family Medicine Group, opens.
  • 2003: The Ministry of Health and Social Services establishes the Réseaux universitaires intégrés de santé (RUIS, referred to now as RUISSS or réseaux universitaires intégrés de santé et de services sociaux), which further strengthens Â鶹AV’s ties to the region. The mandate of RUISSS Â鶹AV is to help facilitate access to health care, teaching and research in designated areas of Quebec. RUISSS Â鶹AV’s territorial responsibility includes the Outaouais region, as well as several others regions from the Montérégie to Nunavik.
  • 2010: Â鶹AV medical students start completing integrated clerkships in the Outaouais region.
  • 2020: Launch of Â鶹AV’s Campus Outaouais, allowing students to complete the Faculty’s four-year undergraduate medical education program (MDCM), as well as their residency, in French, in Outaouais.
  • Teaching and residency training in Outaouais includes various specialties (family medicine, surgery, internal medicine, psychiatry, paediatrics, obstetrics, gynaecology, geriatrics, dermatology, cardiology, nephrology, orthopedics, neurosurgery, vascular surgery and emergency medicine).
  • Visit the Campus’ website for more info: mcgill.ca/campusoutaouais/.
Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2021-2022 (last updated May. 20, 2021) (disclaimer)

Hospitals

Hospitals in Â鶹AV Health Sciences

Â鶹AV Designated Teaching Hospitals

Â鶹AV Designated Teaching Hospitals

The teaching hospital network of Â鶹AV is an integral part of the research, teaching, and clinical activities of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. By agreement and tradition, the administration, medical staff, and scientific personnel of these institutions are closely integrated with Â鶹AV and form the basis for the clinical departments of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences. The Â鶹AV Health Centre (MUHC) / Centre universitaire de santé Â鶹AV (CUSM) is a merger of seven teaching hospitals affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at Â鶹AV. The activities of the MUHC are carried out at the following locations*:

  • Montreal Children's Hospital, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal Chest Institute, and Cedars Cancer Centre at the Glen Site
  • 1001 Decarie Boulevard
  • Montreal QC H4A 3J1
  • Telephone: 514-934-1934
  • Website:
  • Montreal General Hospital
  • 1650 Cedar Avenue
  • Montreal QC H3G 1A4
  • Telephone: 514-934-1934
  • Website:
  • Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
  • 3801 University Street
  • Montreal QC H3A 2B4
  • Telephone: 514-398-6644
  • Website:
  • Lachine Hospital
  • 650 16th Avenue
  • Lachine QC H8S 3N5
  • Telephone: 514-934-1934
  • Website:

The Â鶹AV Health Centre (MUHC), located in Montreal, is one of the most innovative academic health centres in North America. Building on the tradition of medical leadership of its founding hospitals and focusing on complex care, the MUHC receives more than 513,000 ambulatory visits, admits over 36,000 in-patients, performs more than 30,000 surgeries and delivers almost 3,000 babies yearly. In addition to its clinical expertise, the MUHC is proud of the quality and rigour of its clinical and scientific training. Each year 1,200 research trainees; 910 residents, pharmacists and dentists; 2,150 nursing students, nursing assistants, patient attendants, and paramedics; and 730 medical students are trained. Continuing education programs are also an integral part of delivering excellent patient care. In addition, all MUHC physicians are appointed professors at the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at Â鶹AV.

The Â鶹AV Health Centre (MUHC) is one of the world’s foremost academic health centres. Affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences of Â鶹AV, the MUHC continues to shape the course of adult and pediatric medicine by attracting clinical and research expertise from around the world, assessing the latest in medical technology and training the next generation of medical professionals. In collaboration with our network partners, we are building a better future for our patients and their families; for our employees, professionals, researchers, and students; for our community and above all, for life.

The MUHC has more than 14,400 healthcare and other personnel working within the organization's seven clinical missions:

  • The Montreal Children's Hospital
  • Medicine
  • Surgery
  • Neurosciences
  • Mental Health
  • Women's Health
  • Cancer Care

The Research Institute of the Â鶹AV Health Centre (RI-MUHC) is a world-renowned biomedical and healthcare research centre. The Institute, which is affiliated with the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences of Â鶹AV, supports close to 460 researchers and nearly 1,200 research trainees devoted to a broad spectrum of fundamental, clinical, and evaluative research at the Glen site and the Montreal General Hospital. Its research facilities offer a dynamic multidisciplinary environment that fosters collaboration and leverages discovery aimed at improving the health of individual patients across their lifespan.

The RI-MUHC is supported in part by the Fonds de recherche du Québec – Santé (FRQS). More information is available at .

In 2015, the MUHC brought together our legacy sites — the Montreal Chest Institute, the Royal Victoria Hospital, the Montreal Children's Hospital, and the Cedars Cancer Centre — onto one site: the Glen. At the Glen site, our vision of excellence is taking shape by integrating healthcare, research, and teaching

on a whole new level. With custom-built facilities, state-of-the-art equipment, and nurturing healing environments, we are pushing the boundaries of innovation for our current generation and those to come. Renovations are also underway at our other MUHC sites — the Lachine Hospital, the Montreal General Hospital, and the Montreal Neurological Hospital — as we continue to strive to provide the best care for life for our patients and families.

For more information on the MUHC, visit .

There are three other principal teaching hospitals:

Jewish General Hospital (a member facility of the Integrated Health and Social Services University Network for West-Central Montreal/Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux (CIUSSS) du Centre-Ouest-de-l'Île-de-Montréal)

  • 3755 Côte Ste-Catherine Road
  • Montreal QC H3T 1E2
  • Telephone: 514-340-8222
  • Website:

Since 1934, the Jewish General Hospital has served patients of diverse religious, linguistic and cultural backgrounds who reside in Montreal, elsewhere in Quebec, and beyond. As one of the province's largest acute-care hospitals, this 637-bed Â鶹AV teaching hospital admits more than 25,000 patients per year, while handling approximately 520,000 outpatient visits, more than 86,000 emergency visits, and more than 3,900 births. The JGH is widely recognized for excellence in various specialties, including oncology at the Segal Cancer Centre, cardiology, neonatology, orthopedics, family medicine, aging, and emergency medicine. In addition, several services—including the Emergency Department, Intensive Care, Neonatal Intensive Care, Coronary Care, and the operating rooms—opened in a new critical-care pavilion in 2016. The hospital has been designated by the government of Quebec as one of Montreal's five major service centres; as a provincial centre for high-risk obstetrical and neonatal care; and as a breast referral and investigation centre. In addition, during the COVID-19 pandemic, the JGH played a leading role in treatment and care, having been designated by the provincial government in early 2020 as one of the first healthcare centres to provide in-patient treatment to adults who were ill with the virus.

Treatment is provided by approximately 700 affiliated doctors, many of whom have teaching appointments at Â鶹AV, as well as 300 medical residents per year, together with nursing and a wide range of allied health services. The Jewish General Hospital carries out more than 22% of the training for Â鶹AV's Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences and is home to several of the University's programs, including the Â鶹AV Centre for Viral Diseases (encompassing research formerly conducted by the Â鶹AV AIDS Centre), the Â鶹AV Centre for Translational Research in Cancer, the Â鶹AV Head and Neck Surgery and Oncology Program, and the Â鶹AV Menopause Clinic. The hospital's Lady Davis Institute is acknowledged as a world leader in many fields of research, including cancer (the Terry Fox Molecular Oncology Group), aging (the Bloomfield Centre for Studies in Aging), epidemiology (the Centre for Clinical Epidemiology and Community Studies), nursing (the Centre for Nursing Research), cardiovascular disease, genetics, emergency medicine, nephrology, and the psychosocial aspects of illness. The outstanding quality of this work has enabled the Lady Davis Institute to rank among the leaders of Quebec’s hospital-affiliated research institutions in attracting high levels of funding per researcher.

More information is available at .

St. Mary's Hospital Center (Montreal West Island Integrated University Health and Social Services Centre/Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux (CIUSSS) de l'Ouest-de-l'Île-de-Montréal)

  • 3830 Lacombe Avenue
  • Montreal QC H3T 1M5
  • Telephone: 514-345-3511
  • Website:

St. Mary's Hospital Center (SMHC) is an acute-care specialized Â鶹AV affiliated teaching hospital with 271 adult beds. Its official designation as a university-affiliated teaching hospital or a CHAU (Centre hospitalier affilié universitaire) further reinforces its commitment and ability to deliver high quality health care while playing a leading role in the areas of teaching and research. It is responsible for the training of a large cohort of undergraduate and post-graduate students in Medicine and the allied health disciplines.

Over 3,600 babies are delivered annually at St. Mary's, which is the first hospital in Montreal to have received the World Health Organization's (WHO) international recognition of Baby Friendly Hospital Status by the Quebec ministry of health. St. Mary's also has a progressive and active Family Medicine Centre recognized for its teaching. The Hospital also provides numerous highly specialized services such as renal dialysis, oncology, geriatric assessment, and psycho-geriatric, nuclear medicine, C.T. scanning services, as well as MRI exams. There are more than 120,000 out-patient clinic visits, 10,000 procedures through the surgical day centre, and over 11,000 patient admissions, in addition to ambulatory care visits, annually.

The Hospital is noted for its devotion to patients, motivation toward the achievement of excellence, and compassionate care.

Visit the St. Mary's Hospital Center website at to learn more.

Douglas Mental Health University Institute (Montreal West Island Integrated University Health and Social Services Centre/Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux (CIUSSS) de l'Ouest-de-l'Île-de-Montréal)

  • 6875 LaSalle Boulevard
  • Montreal QC H4H 1R3
  • Telephone: 514-761-6131
  • Website:

Founded in 1881, the Douglas Mental Health University Institute has a triple mission of care, research, and teaching. A member of the Â鶹AV Integrated University Health and Social Services Network (RUISSS Â鶹AV) and affiliated with the World Health Organization, it offers hospitalization and extensive out-patient services.

The hospital provides child and adolescent, adult, and geriatric clinical services, and is dedicated to treating patients in the least restrictive manner possible, with a major focus on rehabilitation and successful reintegration into the community. It offers training for residents in psychiatry, as well as for medical and paramedical students from a wide range of disciplines.

The Douglas Institute is one of the largest research centres in mental health in the country, with a team of more than 60 scientists and clinical researchers and more than 200 university students. This team is devoted to making better sense of the causes of mental disorders – whether genetic, environmental, cultural, or social – as well as developing diagnostic tools, treatments, and prevention methods. The Douglas Hospital Research Centre is also home to Â鶹AV centres in schizophrenia, aging, and suicide, as well as the Montreal Pan American Health Organization/World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Reference and Training in Mental Health, which offers consultation services, research, and teaching programs here and abroad.

Visit the Douglas Mental Health University Institute website at to learn more.

Institutions Affiliated with Â鶹AV

Institutions Affiliated with Â鶹AV

As part of the Quebec Government’s health care reform in 2015, most health care institutions merged and grouped into larger entities called either a Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux (CIUSSS), or a Centre intégré de santé et de services sociaux (CISSS). In general, contracts of affiliation are no longer between individual hospitals and the University but between these larger entities and the University.

The following institutions have contracts of affiliation with Â鶹AV for participation in teaching and research in one or more departments and services:

  • Â鶹AV Health Centre
  • CIUSSS de l'Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal
  • CIUSSS du Centre-Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal
  • CISSS de l'Outaouais
  • CISSS de Laval
  • Shriners Hospitals for Children - Canada
Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2021-2022 (last updated Apr. 21, 2021) (disclaimer)

Clinical Facilities for Dentistry

Clinical Facilities for Dentistry

The Â鶹AV Undergraduate Teaching Dental Clinic, previously located in the Montreal General Hospital, is now located at:

At the Clinic, students in the undergraduate program are taught under the guidance of the dental staff to carry out various phases of clinical dentistry and related laboratory procedures. They attend this clinic daily except for such time as may be taken up by lectures or other University work.

Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2021-2022 (last updated Apr. 21, 2021) (disclaimer)

Facilities for Human Nutrition

Facilities for Human Nutrition

The Mary Emily Clinical Nutritional Research Unit is located on 7 Maple Street in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue.

The Unit was developed in 1995 with the objective to create a facility dedicated to in-patient human nutrition experimentation using precisely controlled diets. The Unit is housed in a detached 5,000 sq. ft. building located at the perimeter of the Macdonald Campus with easy access to the community at large. This Unit is capable of supporting 12 research subjects on an in-patient basis. The facility is unique in Canada, in that it allows strict, in-house monitoring and testing of research subjects over prolonged periods while they consume diets prepared in-house. The first floor houses a state-of-the-art metabolic kitchen to prepare foods in a controlled manner, including a sitting area for meal consumption. The second floor houses an interview room to provide for attainment of written ethical consent/assent. A research/clinical assessment room is dedicated to procedures that include blood sampling by a phlebotomy team or clinical staff in adults, infants, and children.

The Unit is a self-supporting initiative which is available for use by external researchers. For further information regarding collaborative or independent extramural research interests, contact the Director of the School of Human Nutrition.

Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2021-2022 (last updated May. 20, 2021) (disclaimer)

Research Centres

Health Sciences Research Centres

Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain

Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain

  • Genome Building, Suite 3100
  • 740 Doctor Penfield Avenue
  • Montreal QC H3A 0G1
  • Telephone: 514-398-8975
  • Fax: 514-398-8121
  • Website:

Pain research at Â鶹AV is carried out by The Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain, which comprises researchers from the Faculties of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dentistry, and Science. The main goal of the Centre is to bring together the Â鶹AV community of basic and clinical pain researchers to promote research that will result in novel treatments for chronic pain. Through its own activities and international collaborations, the Centre focuses on new discoveries and their clinical applications that will improve the prevention and management of chronic pain.

Artificial Cells and Organs Research Centre

Artificial Cells and Organs Research Centre

  • McIntyre Medical Sciences Building, Room 1004
  • 3655 Promenade Sir-William-Osler
  • Montreal QC H3G 1Y6
  • Telephone: 514-398-3512
  • Fax: 514-398-7452
  • Website:

This centre concentrates on interdisciplinary research on artificial cells first invented here (Chang, Â鶹AV,1957, Science 1964) and since evolved into micro-nano systems; nanomedicine; nanobiotherapeutics; nanobiotechnology; nanotechnology; blood substitutes based on nanobiotechnology; hemoperfusion; bioencapsulation of enzymes, cells, stem cells, probiotics; regenerative medicine; delivery systems for drug, enzymes, genes, etc.

At present, the members of this centre at Â鶹AV come from different specialties: Physiology, Biomedical Engineering, Medicine, Pathology, Surgery, Bioengineering, Biotechnology, and Chemical Engineering. This is an international centre with 2 international societies, which coordinates biannual meetings around the world; see . It is the emeritus editor's office for the international journal Artificial Cells, Nanomedicine, and Biotechnology (2020-) and Editor's Office for a book series titled Regenerative Medicine, Artificial Cells, and Nanomedicine. This is a public service website with reviews, papers, videos, and monographs all complementary from the director. It is the major international reference source in this area.

Biomedical Ethics Unit

Biomedical Ethics Unit

The Biomedical Ethics Unit of Â鶹AV, Montreal, was established in 1996 with the aim of supporting scholarly research, clinical services, teaching and public outreach. Members of the unit have backgrounds in sociology, molecular genetics, history, and philosophy with cross-appointments in Social Studies of Medicine, Family Medicine, Experimental Medicine, Human Genetics, Sociology, and the Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health.

The BMEU faculty and trainees are active in a variety of interdisciplinary research areas and have expertise in clinical trial methods, research ethics, genetics, reproductive technologies, access to care, public health ethics, health inequalities, biosecurity, anti-aging research, end-of-life care policies, and pharmaceutical development.

We offer a 2-year Master’s Specialization in Biomedical Ethics through the Departments of Experimental Medicine, Human Genetics, Family Medicine, Philosophy, and Religious Studies.

Centre for Bone and Periodontal Research

Centre for Bone and Periodontal Research

  • 740 Doctor Penfield Avenue, Room 2200
  • Montreal QC H3A 1A4
  • Telephone: 514-934-1934 ext. 35693
  • Fax: 514-398-4020

The Centre for Bone and Periodontal Research was established in October 2001 to promote and facilitate research and training in the areas of bone, cartilage, and periodontal disease. The Bone Centre currently represents the interests of more than 60 clinical and fundamental scientists, many of whom are recognized leaders in research pertaining to disorders such as arthritis, osteoporosis, metastatic and metabolic bone disease, and developmental disorders of the skeleton and oral cavity.

The Centre provides advanced instrumentation for hard tissue research, acts to increase the research capacity of its members and to translate advances into improved diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of diseases involving the skeleton and oral cavity.

Centre for Research on Brain, Language and Music

Centre for Research on Brain, Language and Music

  • 3640 rue de la Montagne
  • Montreal QC H3G 2A8
  • Telephone: 514-398-6962
  • Website:

The Centre for Research on Brain, Language and Music (CRBLM) at Â鶹AV is a Regroupement Stratégique whose mission is to promote research and training in the areas of language and music neuroscience, performance, and development. Participating universities include Â鶹AV, Université de Montréal, UQAM, and Concordia. Our infrastructure for language and music research is unparalleled, including research facilities located in the Â鶹AV Faculties of Medicine and Health Sciences, Science, Arts, and Education, as well as the International Laboratory for Brain and Music Research (BRAMS) located at the Université de Montréal. Our specific objectives include:

  1. promoting the scientific study of language and music neuroscience, performance, and development;
  2. stimulating interdisciplinary and cross-domain collaboration among researchers on basic and applied problems in language and music;
  3. fostering innovative research training for graduate and postdoctoral students;
  4. disseminating research findings to clinical and educational end-users;
  5. forming national and international partnerships.

Our goal is to develop a fundamental theoretical, behavioral, and neuroscientific understanding of the neurobiological, social, and communicative processes of language and music.

Centre for Research in Reproduction and Development

Centre for Research in Reproduction and Development

  • The Research Institute, MUHC Glen Site
  • 1001 Decarie Blvd.,E-M0.3509
  • Montreal QC H4A 3J1
  • Telephone: 514-207-9887
  • Website: mcgill.ca/crrd

The Centre for Research in Reproduction and Development (CRRD), originally established as the Centre for the Study of Reproduction in 1982, is among the longest-standing research centres at Â鶹AV and was a founding partner of the FQRNT-funded Réseau Québecois en Reproduction (RQR). Today, the interdepartmental and interdisciplinary CRRD is home to more than 30 principal investigators, 70 graduate students, 50 fellows and research associates, and 30 technical support staff from 15 departments, 4 faculties, and 8 divisions at the University. With such critical mass, the CRRD has established itself as one of the most productive and dynamic research hubs for young and established researchers committed to the science of reproduction and development.

The research programs of our members span a wide range of diverse and complementary topics, including understanding the basic biological mechanisms that control developing eggs and sperm within the gonads, how the reproductive hormones are produced and exert their effects, how the developing embryo implants into the uterus and establishes communication with its mother, causes and cures for conditions such as pre-eclampsia and intra-uterine growth retardation, and the effects of environmental pollutants and disease on the development of the eggs and sperm and of the fetus. We use both animal model systems and human clinical studies to reach our research objectives.

The CRRD enables and promotes interactions between investigators at Â鶹AV, other universities in Quebec, across Canada, and internationally.

Centre for Translational Research in Cancer

Centre for Translational Research in Cancer

  • Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research
  • Jewish General Hospital
  • 3755 Côte Ste-Catherine
  • Montreal QC H3T 1E2
  • Telephone: 514-340-8222 ext. 28873
  • Website: mcgill.ca/translational-research-cancer

The great challenge faced by the oncology research community is in the translation of laboratory and clinical research data into clinical outcomes of benefit in the assessment, treatment and prevention of cancer. Established in 1996, thanks to a generous endowment gift from the Goldfarb Family Foundation and the Alexander Family Foundation, the MCTRC aims to facilitate the translation of the exciting novel findings made in fundamental laboratories into testable hypotheses for evaluation in clinical trials in oncology (bench-to bedside translation). The Centre provides the infrastructure to bring fundamental and clinician researchers together in order to synergize their efforts at generating novel and promising translational research. This provides a structured focus for these activities and accelerates the testing of potential benefits derived from scientific discovery. Over the years, the MCTRC researchers have been key in discovering, testing and translating new treatment options and diagnostic markers that leads to new cancer management guidelines, and improving cancer care to Canadians.

The Centre provides core functions to enhance translational research, including:
  • Two core clinical research programs: (a) the Clinical Research Unit (CRU), highly specialized in early phase and complex trials of new agents, involves patient monitoring and sample taking; (b) Clinical Research Program runs later stage studies of new therapies that are closer to clinical approval.
  • The Research Molecular Pathology Centre houses state of the art Next Generation Sequencing (NGS), Gene Expression Profiling, and Digital Pathology Platforms and has the goal to generate and offer multi-dimensional technologies toward identifying actionable genetic alterations and molecular drivers of cancer phenotypes that can be seamlessly transferred in the clinical setting.
  • Six biobanks with more than 7,000 participants and 60,000 samples: a) Central Biobank: gastro intestinal, head and neck cancers; b) Breast Cancer Biobank; c) Gynecologic Cancer Biobank; d) Lymphoma Biobank; e) Montreal Immune Related Adverse Events (MIRAE) Biobank: related to cancer immunotherapies; and f) Â鶹AV Clinical Genomics (McG) Biobank: studying the risk of common complex, rare and infectious diseases. In the past year, the JGH biobanks worked as a group to establish institutional biosafety guidelines regarding the biobanking activities during the pandemic, with a laboratory space dedicated to work with COVID-19 positive specimens. An SOP for remote consenting was also developed promptly.
  • The Proteomics Centre integrated with Optilab, a first in Quebec to have certified environment with standardized SOPs to allow for the most rapid translation of proteomics assays into the clinical practice, ultimately improving quality of cancer care in the province by improving precision medicine.
  • • The Augmented Intelligence & Precision Health Program: using handcrafted radiomics and machine learning multiple deep neural network architectures for image analysis and prediction modeling using various imaging modalities including CT and MRI.

The Centre provides a high quality environment for training clinician-scientists in cancer research. Trainees include both graduate students (M.Sc. and Ph.D. students) from the departments of Experimental Medicine, Human Genetics, Pharmacology & Therapeutics, and Pathology) and M.D. scientists interested in clinically-relevant cancer research.

The unique interaction of clinician-scientists and Ph.D. researchers provides an important strength to novel therapeutic development programs. As part of the Segal Cancer Centre located at the Jewish General Hospital, the MCTRC has been forging partnerships with other provincial (iTMT, QCC, Q-CROC) national (Exactis) and international (CCC19 and WIN Consortia) research groups as part of its commitment to conducting cutting-edge fundamental, translational and clinical research in cancer and providing training for the next generation of cancer researchers.

Ludmer Centre for Neuroinformatics & Mental Health

Ludmer Centre for Neuroinformatics & Mental Health

  • Email: info [at] ludmercentre.ca
  • Website:

The Ludmer Centre for Neuroinformatics & Mental Health advances multi-omics, big-data research in normal and abnormal brain development—neurological and psychiatric. It is a collaboration between Â鶹AV, the Douglas Mental Health University Institute (The Douglas), the Jewish General Hospital’s Lady Davis Institute (JGH/LDI), and Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital (The Neuro).

The Centre encompasses 13 researchers, their labs and trainees, based in the faculties of Science and Medicine and Health Sciences, 4 hospitals (The Douglas, JGH, The Neuro, MUHC) and 3 universities (Â鶹AV, Concordia, Yale), and

  • Develops innovative, interoperable and open-source neuroinformatics infrastructure.
  • Leads and supports the application of largescale big-data approaches to brain research.
  • Mentors and trains transdisciplinary researchers in the application of big-data research.

    leads the Neuroimaging and Neuroinformatics Pillars (the Â鶹AV Centre for Integrative Neuroscience-MCIN) at The Neuro. A James Â鶹AV Professor of Neurology & Neurosurgery, he is the Scientific Director of three Â鶹AV-led transdisciplinary initiatives: the , , and Healthy Brains, Healthy Lives.

    leads the Genomics, Bioinformatics & Statistical Genetics Pillar. She is a James Â鶹AV Professor in the departments of Oncology, Human Genetics & Epidemiology; Biostatistics & Occupational Health; and the Division of Cancer Epidemiology; and the Graduate Program Director of the Ludmer-supported Quantitative Life Sciences (QLS) PhD program at Â鶹AV.

    leads the Genomic & Epigenetics Pillar. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Â鶹AV and Leads the Environmental Adversity, Neurodevelopment and Mental Health research group at the Douglas Mental Health University Institute. Dr Silveira is a member of the National Scientific Council on the Developing Child at the Harvard School of Medicine.

To learn more, or participate in a.

Â鶹AV Centre for Viral Diseases

Â鶹AV Centre for Viral Diseases

  • Lady Davis Institute, Room F-318
  • Jewish General Hospital
  • 3999 Côte Ste-Catherine
  • Montreal QC H3T 1E2
  • Telephone: 514-340-8260
  • Contact: mcvd [at] mcgill.ca
  • Website: mcgill.ca/mcvd/

Established in 1990 under the direction of the late Dr. Mark Wainberg, the Â鶹AV AIDS Centre has been at the forefront of HIV research. Now, it is transformed into the Â鶹AV Centre for Viral Diseases, marking its evolution to the study of other viruses that pose serious threats to global health.

The process to formalize expansion of the Centre and redefine its mission to provide solutions to all viral diseases that threaten public health began in 2017. Its scientists have built research programs in areas such as basic virology, immunology, drug discovery, epidemiology, population studies and clinical research.

Dr. Chen Liang is the Centre’s Acting Director. He is an internationally renowned HIV researcher whose lab specializes in restriction factors (RFs), innate anti-viral proteins that are the body’s first-line defence against viruses. Dr. Liang discovered two of the few known host RFs, which underpin the key innate anti-HIV-1 mechanisms. He also pioneered the study of using the genome editor CRISPR to cure HIV infection. Dr. Liang also played an integral role in launching Â鶹AV’s two containment level-3 labs for COVID research.

Many members of the Centre have benefited from the support of MI4 through funding and collaboration. With this diverse and interdisciplinary environment, we are better positioned to find solutions to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Â鶹AV Centre for Research in Neuroscience

Â鶹AV Centre for Research in Neuroscience

  • Montreal General Hospital, Livingston Hall, L7 132
  • Research Institute of the Â鶹AV Health Centre
  • 1650 Cedar Avenue
  • Montreal QC H3G 1A4
  • Telephone: 514-934-8094
  • Fax: 514-934-8216
  • Website: mcgill.ca/crn

The Â鶹AV Centre for Research in Neuroscience (CRN), which was officially established as a University Centre in 1986 under the leadership of Dr. Albert Aguayo, is a vibrant research centre that brings together basic and clinical scientists in highly interactive research groups.

With construction of new CRN laboratories in 1993 and continued expansion since, the group has broadened its focus to include research into the development of neural tissues, synapse formation, and plasticity, the assembly and function of neural circuits, and behavior, while maintaining its strengths in regeneration and repair.

The CRN has been and remains home to some of Canada’s most distinguished neuroscientists. We number more than 60 trainees and staff at any time, including postdoctoral researchers, graduate students, undergraduates, and technicians. The CRN offers a program to train pre-doctoral students for an M.Sc. or Ph.D. degree, as well as postdoctoral Ph.D. or M.D. graduates for careers in biomedical research.

Â鶹AV International TB Centre: PAHO / WHO Collaborating Centre for Tuberculosis Research

Â鶹AV International TB Centre: PAHO / WHO Collaborating Centre for Tuberculosis Research

  • Research Institute of the Â鶹AV Health Centre
  • 5252 de Maisonneuve West, Room 3D.58
  • Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • H4A 3S5
  • Telephone: 514-934-1934, ext. 32128
  • Fax: 514-484-1424
  • Website: mcgill.ca/tb

The Â鶹AV International TB Centre, a WHO Collaborating Centre for TB Research, is a world leader in the interdisciplinary study of TB. Our Centre brings together more than 20 investigators based at Â鶹AV as well as the Research Institute of the MUHC, with expertise in biomedical, clinical, epidemiologic, and social aspects of TB. We work to better understand TB pathogenesis and host resistance, and also develop and evaluate new diagnostics, vaccines, and treatment regimens for the control of TB. By means of quality training, technical assistance, capacity building, and policy-relevant research, our Centre aims to make a positive contribution to ending the TB epidemic nationally as well as globally. Please visit our website at mcgill.ca/tb.

Â鶹AV Research Centre for Studies in Aging

Â鶹AV Research Centre for Studies in Aging

  • 6825 boulevard LaSalle
  • Verdun QC H4H 1R3
  • Telephone: 514-766-2010
  • Website:

The Â鶹AV Research Centre for Studies in Aging (MCSA) is committed to investigating causes and possible treatments of the dementias, especially Alzheimer's Disease. Established in 1985 to develop and offer specialized services for the elderly, MCSA has grown into a multi-disciplinary academic unit dedicated to gerontological research and postgraduate teaching. The MCSA research scope is broad, encompassing mechanisms of aging as well as prevention of age-associated disorders. Since its inception, the MCSA remains dedicated to transformative research and counts numerous teaching, public education, and research accomplishments. The Centre has achieved international recognition and outreach, continuously attracting students, young scientists and international collaborators in Alzheimer’s Disease research. The Center’s scientific production and visibility through many highly cited contributions attest to its excellence and world-class research positioning.

During the past decades, the MCSA has played a pioneering role in identifying genetic abnormalities leading to an increased risk for Alzheimer's Disease. The Memory Clinic of the Alzheimer's Disease Research Unit, under the leadership of Dr. Serge Gauthier, is focusing on improved therapies, long-term treatment of subjects affected by dementia, and enhancing the quality of life of patients and caregivers. Over the last 35 years the priority of the MCSA evolved to primary prevention of cognitive decline, early diagnosis, and treatment for persons with mild or prodromal symptoms, and best treatments for patients with various types of dementia. The importance of genes such as ApoE as risk factors and as predictors of response to treatment in Alzheimer’s Disease was one of the significant contributions of the MCSA to the field of aging. Another achievement of the MCSA is the strong link with academic research centres around the world, including Brazil, China, and Germany, which is reflected by a steady flow of students and visiting scholars from these countries, among others.

In Canada, the MCSA created the academic trial network C5R and has hosted consensus meetings on the best evidence-based approach to the diagnosis and management of various types of dementia. The current focus of the MCSA is on prevention, and the development of tools and methods to allow earliest diagnosis and intervention of age-related disease. Prevention has been identified as an important objective in dementia research by national and international institutes (Alzheimer Society of Canada, National Institute of Aging USA) and is a priority of Â鶹AV over the next decade. The MCSA contributes to this effort with its Dementia Prevention Program that was launched in 2012, entitled “Prevention of Neurodegenerative Disease in Everyone at Risk†(P.O.N.D.E.R.). This program was rebranded in 2020 and is now called SNAP, “Screening of Neurobehavioural Abnormalities in the Aging Population.†SNAP, aims to characterize both normal aging and disease, as well as risk and protective factors. SNAP still aims at utilizing cognitive performance as a tool to screen for dementia at early stages. SNAP features a website that provides free online cognitive assessments and encompasses a comprehensive approach towards the study of variables associated with neurodegeneration in the elderly population. The website is currently available for participants! To register and play the free cognitive training games please visit:

The MCSA has established a computational infrastructure devoted for teaching neuroimaging in dementia for fellows, graduate, and postdoctoral students. This infrastructure program is under the direction of Dr. Pedro Rosa-Neto, M.D., Ph.D. The Translational Neuroimaging Laboratory at the MCSA aims to understand how toxic proteins cause brain damage in Alzheimer’s disease patients. We also develop novel methodologies for early detection of these toxic proteins in the persons without symptoms (see the ). Research in the field of neuroimaging has been focusing on the early detection of dementia, and AD prevention. Our clinic collaborates with other experts at Â鶹AV using the most advanced and sensitive Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and Positron Emission Tomography (PET) protocols to evaluate patients with mild cognitive complaints. The PET and MRI technologies, combined with our clinical expertise, allow for early diagnosis and appropriate treatment of the condition causing memory deficits.

Rosalind and Morris Goodman Cancer Research Centre

Rosalind and Morris Goodman Cancer Research Centre

  • 1160 Pine Avenue West
  • Montreal QC H3A 1A3
  • Telephone: 514-398-3535
  • Fax: 514-398-6769
  • Website: mcgill.ca/gcrc

The mission of the Rosalind and Morris Goodman Cancer Research Centre is to bring together internationally renowned scientists who are devoted to cancer research and provide them with state-of-the-art resources so that they can fully contribute to the worldwide effort of developing novel approaches for the improvement of the diagnosis, treatment, and management of this disease. Investigators within the Centre have made significant contributions toward the molecular understanding of diseases such as cancer which can be exploited to better stratify cancer and facilitate the development of novel therapeutic approaches.

The Rosalind and Morris Goodman Cancer Research Centre provides an internationally recognized training ground for the next generation of investigators who will pursue research in the life sciences and cancer. The Centre plays a key role in reaching out and educating the public on the fundamentals of cancer research and understanding the causes of cancer, its prognosis, and its treatment.

Further information is available at Rosalind and Morris Goodman Cancer Research Centre.

Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2021-2022 (last updated May. 20, 2021) (disclaimer)

Research Institutes

Health Sciences Research Institutes

Institute for Health and Social Policy

Institute for Health and Social Policy

  • Charles Meredith House
  • 1130 Pine Avenue West
  • Montreal QC H3A 1A3
  • Telephone: 514-398-1236
  • Website: mcgill.ca/ihsp

The Institute for Health and Social Policy is a tri-faculty Institute of the Faculties of Medicine and Health Sciences, Arts, and Law, and a unit of the Â鶹AV School for Population and Global Health. It is a multidisciplinary institute for research, training, and cross-sectoral collaboration on issues of social policy, health, and well-being. Its activities focus on how policy is formulated and implemented across different contexts, and on how policy affects population health and well-being. The Institute aims to bring normative and empirical perspectives together in support of effective social policy.

The Â鶹AV Institute for Health and Social Policy is as a multidisciplinary centre for research, training and dialogue on issues of health and social policy. The IHSP conducts world-class research on how social conditions impact the health, well-being and resilience of people and communities locally, provincially, nationally and globally. The Institute collaborates across sectors and disciplines, bringing values and evidence together in support of healthy social policy.

Since it was founded, the Institute for Health and Social Policy has supported numerous world-class initiatives investigating how social conditions impact population health and welfare. For more information, visit: the IHSP website.

Institute of Health Sciences Education

Institute of Health Sciences Education

  • Lady Meredith House
  • 1110 Pine Avenue West, Room 205
  • Montreal QC H3A 1A3
  • Telephone: 514-398-4987
  • Fax: 514-398-7246
  • Website: mcgill.ca/ihse

The Institute of Health Sciences Education (IHSE) was created in February 2019. Building on the success of the Centre for Medical Education, the new Institute promotes excellence and scholarship across the continuum of health sciences education. More specifically, the IHSE at Â鶹AV:

  • Conducts research and scholarly work in health sciences education;
  • Ensures that research advances the field of health sciences education and informs educational practice;
  • Supports interest in educational research and development;
  • Encourages innovation and excellence in teaching and learning; and
  • Offers educational programs and capacity building for future leaders in health sciences education.

With an active interest in the development and enhancement of health sciences education and practice, members of the IHSE consist of clinicians, educators, and researchers from diverse backgrounds and disciplines. Bringing together research and practice, this unique mix of individuals will help us to move beyond traditional departmental and disciplinary boundaries to create new knowledge, enable capacity-building, and promote knowledge translation in the field.

The Institute of Health Sciences Education offers a variety of educational opportunities to students, residents, and faculty. Of interest to medical students and residents are:

  1. The Scholarship in MedEd and Health Sciences Education program, designed for medical students and residents who view education as part of their career. Participants will develop a scholarly project in MedEd and HSE, and apply medical education theories and/or principles pertinent to their project. For more information, visit: the Institute of Health Sciences Education's website.
  2. The Foundations in MedEd and Health Sciences Education program, a non-clinical elective offered on an annual basis in Period 6 of the rotation schedule, which generally falls between November-December of the calendar year. The elective is intended to expose students and residents to the field of medical education through interactive lectures, group discussions, individual and group projects, and participation in the activities of the Institute of Health Sciences Education. For more information, visit: the IHSE website.

The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital)

The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital)

  • 3801 University Street
  • Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 2B4
  • Telephone: 514-398-6644
  • Website: mcgill.ca/neuro

The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital) is a world-leading destination for brain research, training and advanced patient care. The Montreal Neurological Institute is a Â鶹AV research and teaching institute. The Montreal Neurological Hospital is part of the Neuroscience Mission of the Â鶹AV Health Centre.

Founded in 1934 by neurosurgeon Dr. Wilder Penfield, The Neuro is the largest specialized neuroscience research and clinical centre in Canada, and one of the largest in the world and the first institute in the world to adopt fully an Open Science philosophy. Our mission is to understand the brain, find cures and effectively treat people with neurological disorders. Our vision is to transform neurological research and care to change lives.

The Neuro’s scientists and clinicians are pushing the frontiers of science and medicine. They have pioneered surgical treatments of epilepsy and developed electroencephalography as a tool to diagnose seizure activity. The Neuro is the home of many famous neuroscientists including Brenda Milner, Herbert Jasper, KAC Elliot, George Karpati and many others. Scientists in The Neuro’s McConnell Brain Imaging Centre (BIC) introduced Computer Tomography (CT), Positron Emission Tomography (PET) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) to Canada. In February 2019, The Neuro became home to Canada’s first whole body 7T MRI.

The Neuro strives to adopt the newest technologies and recruit the best scientists, trained at the world’s leading research centres. It is now at the very vanguard of the future of brain science: transparent, fast and global flow of knowledge, where discoveries made on one continent can instantly amplify those on another, and where patients benefit from discoveries that represent the most advanced research taking place around the world.

The Neuro is the largest training centre for Neuroscience in Canada, with over 250 postdoctoral fellows, residents, and graduate students working in the labs and clinics each year.

More than 105 faculty members
  • 63 physicians including 15 clinician scientists
  • 80 faculty-led labs
  • 200 graduate students and postdoctoral fellows

Neuro faculty members are collaborative and lead international research teams that generate fundamental information that spans the full spectrum of neuroscience from cell and molecular biology and neurophysiology to brain imaging and cognitive neuroscience to big data and artificial intelligence.

  • Brain Tumour
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Epilepsy
  • Neural Circuits
  • Neurodegenerative Disorders
  • Neurodevelopmental Disorders
  • Neuroimaging and Neuroinformatics
  • Neuroimmunological Diseases
  • Rare Neurological Diseases
Research Centres and Core Facilities
  • Azrieli Centre for Autism Research
  • C-BIG Repository
  • Centre for Neurological Disease Models
  • Cyclotron and Radiochemistry Facility
  • Early Drug Discovery Unit
  • McConnell Brain Imaging Centre
  • Microscopic Cellular Imaging Facility
  • Neurosurgical Simulation Research Centre

For more information, please visit www.theneuro.ca

Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2021-2022 (last updated Apr. 21, 2021) (disclaimer)

Libraries

Libraries

Access to all of the Â鶹AV Library branches and to the Library's licensed electronic resources is available to all Â鶹AV faculty, staff, and students. Information on locations, opening hours, collections, and services can be found at www.mcgill.ca/library. Several of the library branches are likely to be of particular interest to health sciences users.

Schulich Library of Physical Sciences, Life Sciences, and Engineering

The Schulich Library, located in the Macdonald-Stewart Library Building, is temporarily closed to undergo significant structural repairs and major internal upgrades (estimated to reopen in 2022).

Services, staff, and collections are relocated to the McLennan-Redpath Library Complex.

More information is available on the Schulich Library website.

Osler Library of the History of Medicine

The Osler Library of the History of Medicine has as its nucleus the 8,000 volumes willed to Â鶹AV in 1919 by Sir William Osler (one of its most famous pupils and teachers). Osler Library has been temporarily relocated to the McLennan-Redpath Library Complex.

More details are available from the Osler Library Website.

For hours, see:

Macdonald Campus Library

The Macdonald Campus Library, located in the Barton Building, is a primary resource for Dietetics and Human Nutrition users. The Library's collection encompasses a wide variety of resources in agriculture, food and animal science, nutrition, the environment, ecology, plant science, and agricultural engineering. The Library's hours vary throughout the year and are available on the website noted above or by telephoning 514-398-7881.

Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2021-2022 (last updated Apr. 21, 2021) (disclaimer)
School of Physical & Occupational Therapy—2021-2022 (last updated May. 20, 2021) (disclaimer)
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