First annual EPIC Symposium

We are excited to announce that the first annual Emerging and Pandemic Infections Consortium symposium will take place on October 17, 2023 at the Old Mill Toronto!

Please join us for a day of research, networking and community-building. The symposium is free to attend for anyone who is affiliated with one of EPIC’s partner institutes (the Hospital for Sick Children, Sinai Health/Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre/Sunnybrook Research Institute, Unity Health Toronto, University Health Network, University of Toronto). If you are not affiliated with an EPIC partner and would like to attend, please send us a message at epic@utoronto.ca. If you are an industry or government representative and are interested in supporting this event and/or attending, please send us a message at epic@utoronto.ca.

Download the PDF agenda here.

To see the full list of posters, please download the PDF here.

Symposium agenda

TIME EVENT
8:00 – 8:45 am Registration Coffee and a light breakfast will be served.
8:45 – 9:00 am Opening remarks
9:00 – 10:45 am Session #1: Emerging pathogen surveillance and response Silence = Death: How community engagement was central to research and public health during Ontario’s mpox response  Darrell Tan, Unity Health Toronto Emerging infectious diseases threats during pregnancy: building systems of surveillance and response Vanessa Allen, Sinai Health Alphacoronaviruses in bats in eastern Ontario, Canada Jonathon Kotwa, Sunnybrook Research Institute Distributed, low-burden diagnostics: an emerging role for synthetic biology and low-cost hardware  Keith Pardee, Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, U of T Empowering communities: education and outreach in Toronto’s Black community during the COVID-19 pandemic Upton Allen, Hospital for Sick Children
10:45 – 11:00 am Coffee break
11:00 am – 12:00 pm Lightning round: Meet the new PIs Roger Antabe, Department of Health and Society, U of T Scarborough Aereas Aung, Institute of Biomedical Engineering, U of T Artem Babaian, Department of Molecular Genetics, U of T Marcus Dillon, Department of Biology, U of T Mississauga Guillaume Filion, Department of Cell and Systems Biology, U of T Scarborough Greg German, Unity Health Toronto Sarah Haines, Department of Civil and Mineral Engineering, U of T Bowen Li, Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, U of T Mike Norris, Department of Biochemistry, U of T Kathryn Rozen-Gagnon, Department of Molecular Genetics, U of T Nicole Weckman, Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, U of T Alice Zhabokritsky, University Health Network
12:00 – 1:00 pm Lunch
1:00 – 2:00 pm Keynote presentation: Lessons learned from reporting at the pandemic’s front lines Lauren Pelley, senior health and medical reporter, CBC
2:00 – 3:00 pm Panel discussion: Breaking the cycle of panic and neglect to create sustained readiness to infectious threats Moderator: Lauren Pelley (senior health and medical reporter, CBC) Panelists: Leah Cowen (University of Toronto), Marisa Creatore (Canadian Institutes for Health Research), David Naylor (University of Toronto)
3:00 – 3:15 pm Coffee break
3:15 – 5:00 pm Session #2: Development and implementation of innovative countermeasures Flow virometry: a new lens for virus-based therapies & vaccines Christina Guzzo, Department of Cell and Systems Biology, U of T Scarborough Bio-inspired surfaces to prevent microbial attachment Ben Hatton, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, U of T Using stem cell-derived macrophages to combat pulmonary viral infections Michael Litvack, Hospital for Sick Children Lessons learned from studying T cell responses following SARS-CoV-2 infection or vaccination Tania Watts, Department of Immunology, U of T Understanding COVID-19’s inner workings and new treatment approaches Haibo Zhang, Unity Health Toronto
5:00 – 7:00 pm Networking reception and poster session