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91亚色 doctoral student receives Ontario Women's Health Scholars Award

91亚色 kinesiology and health science PhD candidate Kara Hawkins will receive a Women鈥檚 Health Scholars Award for her research aimed at enhancing early detection of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease in women.

Hawkins is one of six outstanding researchers at Ontario universities to be awarded for their work to improve the health of women through the 2014-15 Ontario Women鈥檚 Health Scholars Awards.

Kara Hawkins

Kara Hawkins

鈥淭his award will allow us to expand upon our findings in older women demonstrating disruption to structural and functional connectivity in the brains of participants at increased genetic risk of developing Alzheimer's disease, and the association between these brain alterations and our behavioural cognitive-motor assessment,鈥 says Hawkins.

Their work is being expanded to include young female participants in their brain imaging studies to examine changes associated with normal healthy aging in the female brain, she says.

鈥淲e expect that this will help elucidate underlying brain alterations associated with changes in visuomotor control observed in normal aging, and will aid in differentiating healthy from pathological aging.鈥

This is the second consecutive year that Hawkins has received the award worth up to $22,000 for her research.

鈥淲omen have unique health-care issues and by focusing on them, Ontario university researchers are improving women鈥檚 health across the globe,鈥 says Bonnie M. Patterson, president and CEO of the , which administers the awards.

Recipients this year include postdoctoral, doctoral and master鈥檚 students from three Ontario universities, who receive research grants of $19,000 to $45,000 each through the awards, which were established in 2001 with funding from the Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-term Care.

Research & Innovation

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