Meghan Elliott, MD, MSc, FRCPC
MD, Queen's UniversityNephrologist, Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada
MSc, Clinical Epidemiology, Institute of Health Policy, Management, and Evaluation, University of Toronto
Areas of Research
Health services research, Chronic kidney disease care delivery
Dr. Elliott is a Clinician-Scientist with clinical training in nephrology and a research focus in chronic kidney disease care delivery. Dr. Elliott's program of research employs primarily qualitative and mixed methods to understand patients' needs and priorities, identify care gaps, and develop interventions that support self-management and integrated care in the community. Examples of projects related to this theme include the implementation of patient-reported outcome measures in hemodialysis care, shared decision-making in dialysis-related treatment decisions, and patient-centered models of urgent care delivery. Dr. Elliott engages with patients as partners throughout her research.
Dr. Elliott is a Clinician-Scientist with clinical training in nephrology and a research focus in chronic kidney disease care delivery. Dr. Elliott's program of research employs primarily qualitative and mixed methods to understand patients' needs and priorities, identify care gaps, and develop interventions that support self-management and integrated care in the community. Examples of projects related to this theme include the implementation of patient-reported outcome measures in hemodialysis care, shared decision-making in dialysis-related treatment decisions, and patient-centered models of urgent care delivery. Dr. Elliott engages with patients as partners throughout her research.
Supervising degrees
Community Health Sciences - Masters: Accepting Inquiries
Community Health Sciences - Doctoral: Unavailable
Working with this supervisor
Dr. Elliott is seeking highly motivated individuals with an interest in qualitative or mixed methods research. Experience and strong interest in implementation science and expertise in academic writing are assets. Preference will be given to candidates with high academic standing in a related research or clinical discipline.