The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia
Faculty of MedicineRoad Safety & Public Health Research | Department of Emergency Medicine
  • Home
  • About
    • People
    • Areas of Research
  • Projects
    • Active Transportation Injury Circumstances and Outcome Study
    • Cannabis and Motor Vehicle Crash Study
    • Crash risk after Cardioverter-defibrillator Implantation
    • National Drug Driving Study
    • Étude nationale sur la conduite sous l’influence de la drogue
    • Partnerships for Cannabis Policy Evaluation
    • Road Trauma Outcome Study
    • Syncope and Subsequent Crash Risk: A population-based analysis
  • Publications
  • News
  • Get Involved
  • DID Study – Authorship Guidelines (Internal)
  • More Canadians may be driving high since cannabis legalization: UBC study

    THC is being detected in twice as many injured drivers since cannabis was legalized in Canada, according to our newly published study in the New England Journal of Medicine.   Read More

  • Learn more about our Active Transportation Injury Circumstances and Outcome Study

    The Active Transportation Injury Circumstances and Outcome Study (ATICO) study aims to provide healthcare providers with evidence they can use to improve health outcomes for active transportation users, and to help policymakers and city planners to develop injury prevention strategies. The study is planning to start enrolling participants in early 2022. Click here for more […] Read More

About Us 

Areas of Research 

Meet Our Team

 


Current Projects

Active Transportation Injury Circumstances and Outcome

Cannabis and Motor Vehicle Crashes

Crash Risk After Cardioverter-defibrillator Implantation

National Drug Driving Study

Sleepy Driving Simulator Study

Syncope and Subsequent Crash Risk

 


Collaborators & Funders

Road Safety & Public Health Research | Department of Emergency Medicine
Faculty of Medicine
7th Floor - 828 West 10th Avenue (VGH Research Pavilion)
Vancouver, BC Canada V5Z 1M9
Find us on
 
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility