Matters of Engagement

mattersofengagement

Matters of Engagement examines issues at the intersection of health, health care and society. Including: how people in Canada access and experience health care service delivery and distribution; how those experiences impact both individual and community health; and the multitude of environmental, systemic, and political factors that favour some and disadvantage many. Jennifer Johannesen and Emily Nicholas Angl produce each episode with the aim of illuminating difficult or confounding issues, to provoke much-needed critical dialogue among all stakeholders.

  1. 12/02/2025

    Learning From Unexpected Results: What the Numbers Didn't Capture (BETTER Women 4/5)

    The BETTER Women research team gathered to review their findings, hoping to see clear evidence that peer health coaching improved women's preventative health behaviours. But the results told suggested a more complex story. While the quantitative data showed no statistically significant benefit from adding peer health coaches to the program, the qualitative interviews revealed a different picture: participants and coaches described meaningful relationships, increased confidence, and genuine support that simply weren't captured in the measured outcomes. In this episode, we sit in on the research team's candid debrief as they work through disappointing numbers, examine what might have gone wrong, and discover valuable insights about the gap between what researchers measure and what participants actually value. From volunteer bias to pandemic pivots to goals that don't fit neatly into outcome frameworks, this is an honest look at what happens when research doesn't go as planned—and why mixed or disappointing results are just as important as clear successes. [download transcript] More episodes in this series: Trailer Episode 1: Going “Upstream” to Prevent Chronic Disease Episode 2: The Science behind Peer Health Support Episode 3: Voices from the Heart of the Project: Peer Health Coaches Related research: Assessing the effectiveness of “BETTER Women”, a community-based, primary care-linked peer health coaching programme for chronic disease prevention: protocol for a pragmatic, wait-list controlled, type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial Improving chronic disease prevention and screening in primary care: results of the BETTER pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial. Results from the BETTER WISE trial: a pragmatic cluster two arm parallel randomized controlled trial for primary prevention and screening in primary care during the COVID-19 pandemic Links: The BETTER Women project Canadian Cancer Society Women's College Hospital

    30 min
  2. 10/01/2025

    Voices from the Heart of the Project: Peer Health Coaches (BETTER Women 3/5)

    Meet the peer health coaches - the volunteers at the heart of the BETTER Women project. Through candid conversations, we hear from women who underwent extensive training in motivational interviewing and health coaching to support others on their wellness journeys. From international physicians to cancer survivors to newcomers seeking community connection, these coaches share what drew them to the program, how the training changed their own relationships, and the profound impact of walking alongside someone through health behaviour change. This is healthcare powered by human connection. [download transcript] More episodes in this series: Trailer Episode 1: Going “Upstream” to Prevent Chronic Disease Episode 2: The Science behind Peer Health Support Related research: Assessing the effectiveness of “BETTER Women”, a community-based, primary care-linked peer health coaching programme for chronic disease prevention: protocol for a pragmatic, wait-list controlled, type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial Improving chronic disease prevention and screening in primary care: results of the BETTER pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial. Results from the BETTER WISE trial: a pragmatic cluster two arm parallel randomized controlled trial for primary prevention and screening in primary care during the COVID-19 pandemic Links: The BETTER Women project Canadian Cancer Society Women's College Hospital

    40 min
  3. 08/28/2025

    ⭐ REPLAY! ⭐ Discussing Failures in Participatory Research, with Lori Ross

    This REPLAY! episode first aired December, 2021.  New introduction by Emily Nicholas Angl, followed by a full replay of the episode. Also, we've added some publications to the show notes (scroll down) related to this episode. Discussing Failures in Participatory Research, with Lori Ross We initially invited Lori Ross on the podcast to discuss the PEERS  (Peers Examining Experiences in Research) Study – a 2 yr federally funded research project looking at the experiences of peer researchers with lived experience in communities that face structural oppression in Canada, including mental health service users, people who use drugs, trans and non-binary communities, and racialized communities.  Not only was the project team studying peer researchers, but they employed peer researchers (as research assistants) as well.  In our conversation, we discussed this research project, the findings of which are still to be written up. However, the conversation also revealed that the research team was concurrently studying what they saw as failures in the study while they were conducting the research, and that they plan to write up those reflections as well. We’re excited to bring you this conversation with Lori Ross, the principal investigator, who shares with us some of the ins and outs of studying a process while simultaneously doing the work… and some of the project team’s insights into why their participatory research project experienced failures.  Added to the experiential piece is their theoretical framing, which is sure to shed light on why participatory research conducted in the context of a large institution may indeed be “doomed to fail” when it comes to power sharing and other social justice aims. [download transcript] Guests: Lori Ross on twitter Lori Ross’ profile (Dalla Lana School of Public Health at the University of Toronto) Mentioned in this episode: PEERS study web page Added 2025: Ross, L. E., Pilling, M., Voronka, J., Pitt, K. A., McLean, E., King, C., … Guta, A. (2023). ‘I will play this tokenistic game, I just want something useful for my community’: experiences of and resistance to harms of peer research. Critical Public Health, 33(5), 735–746. https://doi.org/10.1080/09581596.2023.2268822 Jijian Voronka, Carole King, Reflections on Peer Research: Powers, Pleasures, Pains, The British Journal of Social Work, Volume 53, Issue 3, April 2023, Pages 1692–1699, https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcad010 Ross, L. E., Pilling, M., Pitt, K.-A., & Voronka, J. (2024). Even with the best of intentions: An accounting of failures in a participatory research project. In C. Carter, C. T. Jones, & C. Janzen (Eds.), Contemporary vulnerabilities: Reflections on social justice methodologies (pp. 168–185). University of Alberta Press. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09581596.2023.2268822#d1e402 Kinnon R MacKinnon, Adrian Guta, Jijian Voronka, Merrick Pilling, Charmaine C Williams, Carol Strike, Lori E Ross, The Political Economy of Peer Research: Mapping the Possibilities and Precarities of Paying People for Lived Experience, The British Journal of Social Work, Volume 51, Issue 3, April 2021, Pages 888–906, https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcaa241

    46 min

About

Matters of Engagement examines issues at the intersection of health, health care and society. Including: how people in Canada access and experience health care service delivery and distribution; how those experiences impact both individual and community health; and the multitude of environmental, systemic, and political factors that favour some and disadvantage many. Jennifer Johannesen and Emily Nicholas Angl produce each episode with the aim of illuminating difficult or confounding issues, to provoke much-needed critical dialogue among all stakeholders.