The Max Bell School's Media Ecosystem Observatory is out with a new research paper on vaccine hesitancy in Canada.

Some of the key findings:

Sixty-five percent of Canadians intend to take a vaccine, with some slight erosion since a high in July. Approximately 15 percent of Canadians are unwilling, and an additional 20 percent are unsure. 

Read the full paper here (PDF)

Classified as: max bell school, max bell school of public policy, taylor owen, Peter Loewen, Derek Ruths, Aengus Bridgman, Haji Mohammad Saleem, Eric Merkley, Oleg Zhilin, policy, Elections & Representation Lab, Munk School of Global affairs and Public Policy, university of toronto, media ecosystem observatory, Centre for Media, Technology and Democracy, McGill University
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Published on: 26 Apr 2021

University of Toronto and McGill University scientists are leading an international partnership to discover new and improved drug treatments for tuberculosis, malaria and neglected tropical diseases  -- thanks to a contribution from Merck Canada Inc., as well as an additional $5 million supplement to a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The new funding brings the total investment from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to nearly US $12 million since 2012.

Classified as: medicine, health, tuberculosis, university of toronto, drug, health and lifestyle, Malaria, tropical diseases, Merck Canada, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, cryptosporidiosis, protozoan
Published on: 17 Dec 2015

This is Karl Moore of the Desautels Faculty of Management at McGill University, talking management for The Globe and Mail. Today, I am delighted to speak to Roger Martin, the former dean of the Rotman School [of Management at the University of Toronto] – one of Canada’s, in fact one of the world’s, top business thinkers. It is great to have him here today.

Classified as: Talking Management, Karl Moore, management, the globe and mail, roger martin, rotman school, university of toronto
Published on: 4 Jul 2014
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