Английская Википедия:Christine Chambers

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:For Шаблон:Infobox scientist Christine Therese Chambers is a Canadian clinical psychologist at Dalhousie University.[1] She holds a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Children's Pain.[2][3]

Education

Chambers became interested in psychology as a child. She completed her undergraduate degree at Dalhousie University. She spent her summers at the IWK Health Centre.[4] She joined the University of British Columbia for her graduate studies (MA, PhD),[5] working with Kenneth D. Craig on pain.[6]

Research and career

At Dalhousie University, Chambers works in the Centre for Paediatric Pain Research.[7] She serves as Assistant Director of the North American Pain School.[8] She leads a large research team of doctoral students and research staff, studying the developmental, social and psychological influences on children's pain.[9] A 2012 analysis of the research productivity of clinical psychology professors in Canada identified Chambers in the top-ten list for most productive women.[10]

Chambers has served on the scientific programming committee for the International Association for the Study of Pain in 2014 and 2016. She is a member of the council for the IASP. In 2014 Chambers spoke at TEDxMount Allison University.[11] She has been a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Children's Pain since 2015.[12] She specializes in chronic pain and is interested in how scientists can use social media to promote their research.[13] Chambers is the secretary of the board of directors for the Society of Pediatric Psychology,[14] She took part in Soapbox Science in 2018.[6]

In 2019, Chambers was announced as the new Scientific Director of the CIHR Institute of Human Development, Child and Youth Health, effective January 2020.[15]

It Doesn't Have to Hurt

Chambers is the principal investigator of It Doesn’t Have to Hurt (#ItDoesntHaveToHurt), an information platform supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.[16] The platform brings together parents, researchers and experts in digital media to communicate evidence about how young people experience pain.[17] They use integrated knowledge translation to better connect to their audience.[18] They work with Erica Ehm's Yummy Mummy Club to create informative social media campaigns.[19] She contributes to the magazine Parents Canada. Their social media work generated hundreds of millions of impressions and the group several won awards for their campaigning. They held a knowledge transfer event at Twitter in Canada in 2016.[20][21] She developed a YouTube video to talk about ways to make injections less painful for children.[22]

Awards and honors

She was awarded the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) Ulf Lindblom Young Investigator Award in 2010.[23][24] Chambers was awarded the American Pain Society Jeffrey Lawson Award in 2016.[25]

References

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