Simon Fraser University Secures $4.4M in CIHR Funding for Global Health Innovation Projects

SFU Leads Four Cutting-Edge Projects on Overdose Crisis, PTSD, Chronic Diseases, and Brain Aging

  • ai-in-medicine
  • higher-education-news
  • canadian-universities
  • higher-education-canada
  • dementia-research

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

white and brown concrete building under blue sky during daytime
Photo by Vlad D on Unsplash

Promote Your Research… Share it Worldwide

Have a story or a research paper to share? Become a contributor and publish your work on AcademicJobs.com.

Submit your Research - Make it Global News

SFU's Major CIHR Win Highlights Canada's Commitment to Health Research Excellence

Simon Fraser University (SFU), one of Canada's leading comprehensive research institutions, has secured over $4.4 million from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) through its highly competitive Project Grant: Fall 2025 program. This funding supports four innovative SFU-led projects tackling urgent global health challenges, from Canada's overdose crisis to chronic diseases and age-related cognitive decline.6160 The announcement underscores SFU's growing prominence in health sciences, where it ranks among the top universities for medical/science grants and contributes significantly to national research output.75

In a competition that approved 421 grants totaling $413 million with a 13.6% success rate, British Columbia institutions like SFU received 42 awards, reflecting the province's 12% success rate.122133 This investment not only advances scientific discovery but also positions SFU as a hub for interdisciplinary health innovation, attracting talent and fostering collaborations across Canadian higher education.

Understanding the CIHR Project Grant and Its Role in Canadian Higher Education

The CIHR Project Grant program is a cornerstone of federal health research funding in Canada, supporting investigator-initiated projects across biomedical, clinical, health systems, and population health domains. The Fall 2025 cycle saw 3,101 applications, with funded projects averaging $979,653 over 4.54 years. Early career researchers received 108 grants (25.7%), emphasizing CIHR's commitment to nurturing future leaders.122

For universities like SFU, this funding is vital amid rising research costs and competition. SFU's sponsored research income has surged 144% over the past decade to $286 million in 2025, ranking it among Canada's top 15 research universities.61 Such grants enable faculty to lead multi-disciplinary teams, train graduate students, and translate findings into policy and practice, strengthening Canada's global health leadership.

Explore higher ed jobs in health research at institutions driving these advancements.

Project Spotlight: AI-Powered MRI Analysis for Chronic Disease Detection

Led by Mirza Faisal Beg, professor in SFU's School of Engineering Science, this project develops an artificial intelligence (AI) system to analyze full-body magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans in minutes. The tool quantifies muscle, fat, bone, and organ health, aiding early detection of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, lung conditions, and cancer.61

Traditional MRI analysis is time-intensive, relying on expert interpretation. Beg's AI, trained on expert annotations, automates precise measurements, enabling personalized care. With plans for global commercialization, this could position SFU and Canada at the forefront of medical AI, reducing healthcare burdens and improving outcomes for chronic conditions affecting millions.

SFU AI MRI scan analysis for chronic diseases

Tackling Canada's Overdose Crisis: Evaluating Life-Saving Interventions

Kora DeBeck, associate professor in SFU's School of Public Policy, leverages the At-Risk Youth Study (ARYS) cohort—spanning two decades—to assess interventions like opioid agonist therapy, drug-checking, and supervised consumption sites. Canada's overdose crisis has claimed over 53,000 lives since 2016, with ongoing toxic drug deaths straining public health systems.10061

DeBeck's longitudinal data will provide evidence on intervention effectiveness, informing policy amid dual public health emergencies (opioids and COVID-19). ARYS, one of the longest-running youth substance use studies, highlights SFU's expertise in population health, bridging academia and policy for real-world impact.

Related reading: Challenges in Canadian higher ed research.

canada text overlay on black background

Photo by Andy Holmes on Unsplash

Innovative Neuromarker Tools for PTSD and Depression Treatment

Faranak Farzan, professor in Mechatronic Systems Engineering, builds on her EEG-based antidepressant predictors to develop tools matching patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depressive disorder (MDD) to deep transcranial magnetic stimulation (dTMS). PTSD affects 8% of Canadians, with 50% comorbidity with MDD leading to severe symptoms and suicide risk.61

dTMS, a non-invasive brain stimulation, shows promise but requires personalization. Farzan's neuroengineering approach uses biomarkers to optimize treatment, reducing trial-and-error and healthcare strain. Her work exemplifies SFU's integration of engineering and health sciences.

Unraveling Brain Changes in Aging to Combat Dementia

Randy McIntosh, professor in Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology and director of SFU's Institute for Neuroscience and Neurotechnology, investigates subtle brain alterations causing cognitive decline in aging. Distinguishing resilient aging from dementia precursors, his computational modeling informs interventions for healthy cognition.61

With Canada's aging population, dementia research is critical. McIntosh's Virtual Brain platform simulates brain dynamics, advancing personalized neurology and positioning SFU as a neurotech leader.

SFU neuroscience research on brain aging and dementia

SFU's Research Ecosystem: A Model for Canadian Higher Education

SFU hosts over 60 research centres, including the Institute for Neuroscience and Neurotechnology, fostering interdisciplinary collaboration. Ranked #1 comprehensive university by Maclean's 2026 and top in medical/science grants, SFU exemplifies how targeted funding drives innovation.7775

  • 144% research income growth to $286M (2015-2025).
  • Top 1-2% globally in rankings.
  • Strong knowledge mobilization and entrepreneurship support.

Learn more about academic careers in health research.

External: SFU News, CIHR Results.

Impacts on Healthcare, Economy, and Higher Education Careers

These projects promise earlier detections, better treatments, and policy insights, easing Canada's $10B+ annual overdose burden and supporting aging populations. For higher ed, they create postdoc, grad student, and faculty opportunities in AI health, neuroscience, and public policy.61

ProjectKey Impact
AI MRIPersonalized chronic disease care
Overdose InterventionsEvidence-based policy
PTSD dTMSOptimized mental health treatments
Brain AgingDementia prevention strategies

Canadian university jobs and faculty positions abound in these fields.

a large building with a clock tower on top of it

Photo by Philip Yu on Unsplash

Future Outlook: SFU's Role in Canada's Health Research Landscape

With CIHR prioritizing equity (73 equalization grants), SFU's diverse PIs exemplify inclusive research. Future expansions could include clinical trials and industry partnerships, amplifying impacts. As Canada invests in health R&D, universities like SFU train the next generation.

Check Rate My Professor for SFU faculty insights.

Opportunities and Calls to Action for Aspiring Researchers

SFU's success highlights pathways in health sciences. Prospective students: Explore grad programs in engineering, policy, neuroscience. Professionals: Browse higher ed jobs, university positions. Engage via career advice.

Portrait of Jarrod Kanizay

Jarrod KanizayView full profile

Founder & Job Advertising Guru

Visionary leader transforming academic recruitment with 20+ years in higher education.

Discussion

Sort by:

Be the first to comment on this article!

You

Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

New0 comments

Join the conversation!

Add your comments now!

Have your say

Engagement level

Frequently Asked Questions

💰What is the CIHR Project Grant Fall 2025?

The CIHR Project Grant supports investigator-initiated health research, funding 421 projects worth $413M with a 13.6% success rate.122

👥Who are the principal investigators at SFU?

Mirza Faisal Beg (AI MRI), Kora DeBeck (overdose), Faranak Farzan (PTSD), Randy McIntosh (brain aging).

⚕️How does SFU's funding address Canada's overdose crisis?

Kora DeBeck uses ARYS data to evaluate interventions like supervised consumption, amid 53k+ deaths since 2016.100

🧠What is the AI MRI project about?

Automated full-body scan analysis for chronic diseases, enabling personalized care and early detection.

🩺How will PTSD treatment improve?

Faranak Farzan's tools match patients to dTMS using EEG biomarkers, reducing trial-and-error.

🧬SFU's role in dementia research?

Randy McIntosh models brain changes in aging to distinguish resilience from impairment.

🏆SFU research rankings in Canada?

#1 comprehensive uni (Maclean's), top medical grants.77

📈Impacts on Canadian healthcare?

Earlier detections, better policies, reduced system strain; economic boost via commercialization.

💼Career opportunities at SFU health research?

Higher ed jobs in AI, neuroscience, policy for grads/postdocs.

🔗How to get involved in SFU research?

Check professor ratings, apply to programs, follow SFU Research.

📊CIHR success rate and BC funding?

13.6% overall; BC 42 grants, $920k avg.133