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Christine Maheu (PhD)

Academic title(s): 

Associate Professor 

Christine Maheu (PhD)
Contact Information
Email address: 
christine.maheu [at] mcgill.ca
Department: 
Ingram School of Nursing
Division: 
Surgical and Interventional Sciences
Degree(s): 

RN, PhD

Graduate supervision: 

Currently supervising students

Group: 
Currently Recruiting
M.Sc. Students
M.Sc. Non-Thesis projects
Ph.D. Students
Research areas: 
Surgical Education and Simulation
Data Science
Areas of expertise: 

Dr. Maheu’s primary area of research is on the psychosocial and behavioural impact of cancer in cancer survivors and individuals at risk for inherited cancers. In addition, she conducts and tests group psychotherapy approaches to help cancer survivors deal with uncertainty and fear of recurrence. She also has an interest in descriptive studies for health capitals among minority groups towards breast cancer prevention. 

Current research: 

Cancer survivorship care, psychosocial oncology clinical interventions 

Areas of interest: 

Psychosocial & behaviour impact of breast/ovarian cancer, of being at risk for an inherited cancer, and of genetic testing 

Biography: 

Dr. Christine Maheu is a Professor at the Ingram School of Nursing at º£½ÇÉçÇø. She also holds a Clinical Scientist position with the Cancer Survivorship Program at Princess Margaret Cancer Centre, Toronto.  At º£½ÇÉçÇø, she teaches research, supervises graduate students (masters, doctorates, post-doctorates), mentors practicing nurses and students in research and conducting research (in English/French). Her research is focused on cancer survivorship care with special interests in psychosocial oncology clinical interventions. Dr. Maheu is a co-principal investigator on fear of cancer recurrence, a study with funds from the Canadian Cancer Society. Sponsored from the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer (CPAC), she currently leads a team on the creation of the Cancer and Work website, addressing the needs of cancer survivors, health care providers and employers when returning and staying at work following cancer. Additionally in partnership with IPSOS, funded by CPAC, she is co-leading a nationwide survey assessment of transition care needs of cancer patients from end of treatment to three years post diagnosis. Dr. Maheu received excellence awards in nursing research (2013, 2015, 2016) from Ovarian Cancer Canada, the Canadian Association of Nurses in Oncology and the Quebec Association of Nurses in Oncology.  

Selected publications: 

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