The CDPE strives to improve community health and safety by conducting research and outreach on best practices in drug policy. We work collaboratively with governments, affected communities, and civil society to guide effective and evidence-based policy responses to substance use.
The CDPE was founded as the International Centre for Science in Drug Policy (ICSDP) in 2010 at the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS in Vancouver, Canada. The CDPE is now housed within the Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute at St. Michael’s Hospital, a site of Unity Health Toronto, in Toronto, Canada.
The CDPE endeavors to be a primary source for rigorous scientific evidence on the impacts of illegal drug policy on community health and safety. To that end, the CDPE produces research products that adhere to the highest standards of peer-reviewed scientific research. The CDPE also conducts outreach and knowledge translation to inform policymakers, affected communities, key stakeholders, and the general public on pressing current issues surrounding illegal drugs and drug policy. The CDPE also leads innovative primary research, including on drug checking services, supervised injection services, injection drug use prevention, overdose response, and drug policy evaluation.
Our Team
Dan Werb, PhD, is an epidemiologist and policy analyst with expertise in HIV, addictions, and drug policy. Dr. Werb is a Research Scientist at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto, and holds a dual appointment as Assistant Professor in the Division of Infectious Diseases & Global Public Health at the University of California San Diego and in the Institute of Health Policy, Management & Evaluation at the University of Toronto. He is also Affiliate Assistant Professor in the Division of AIDS at the University of British Columbia. Dr. Werb is an inaugural winner of the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse Avenir Award (2015) for creative new investigators proposing highly innovative research at the intersection of HIV and substance use. This award supports his work as Principal Investigator of PRIMER: Preventing Injecting by Modifying Existing Responses, a five-year multi-site cohort study tasked with developing interventions to preventing entry into injection drug use.
Dr. Werb is the recipient of a Trailblazer Award (2017) from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. He conducts extensive knowledge translation on drug policy and public health, through print and radio journalism, and is the winner of a 2014 Canadian National Magazine Award for his popular science writing. Finally, he was profiled in April 2017 as one of 13 young Canadians making a difference as part of the CBC series ‘We Are Canada’ (http://www.cbc.ca/player/play/925251139650). His general interest non-fiction book about Tijuana’s femicide, City of Omens, will be published in 2019 (Bloomsbury Publishing).
Research Scientist
Mohammad Karamouzian is an infectious disease epidemiologist. A former veterinarian (DVM) turned public health researcher, he holds a PhD in Population and Public Health (2021) from the University of British Columbia where he had the Vanier and Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation doctoral scholarships. Before joining CDPE, he was a Banting postdoctoral fellow at Brown School of Public Health. He is also affiliated with the BC Centre on Substance Use (BCCSU) and the WHO Collaborating Centre for HIV Surveillance (HIVHUB) in the Middle East and North Africa. Dr. Karamouzian’s research focuses on addressing health inequities faced by marginalized populations, such as female sex workers, people who inject drugs, and people who are incarcerated. He is committed to translating his research into policies that will improve the health of marginalized populations. He has authored/co-authored 120+ peer-reviewed publications in leading international peer-reviewed journals and won 20+ awards and scholarships for his research, leadership, and academic achievements.
Research Assistant
Hannah is a part-time researcher at CDPE, working on the cohort study. Hannah Ali is a PhD student in Socio-cultural Anthropology at Cornell. Hannah’s work draws on the anthropology of addiction, harm reduction, public health, ethics, youth studies, care, and Somali Studies. Hannah’s previous ethnography followed Somali-Canadian families’ embodiment of indigenous philosophies and laws in Toronto, Canada.
Her current work follows Toronto’s fentanyl epidemic based on the experiences of Somali youth. She was interested in how these youths navigate addiction, homelessness, and their experiences with community resources. Hannah’s work derives from her experiences with community shelter work, program supervision, and collaborative community research. Hannah is a Second-Generation Somali-Canadian born and raised in Burnaby, British Columbia. At large, hannah is interested in how public health discourse can learn from and incorporate how marginalized communities develop creative solutions to the health and socioeconomic barriers they face.
Research Assistant
Nick is a research assistant at CDPE working on quantitative analysis for the TDOT cohort study. He is a PhD student in Health Services Research (Outcomes and Evaluation emphasis) at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto working under the primary supervision of Professor Therese Stukel. Currently, his thesis aims to explore polypharmacy in older populations using electronic health records and other real-world healthcare data sources, with a particular focus on the development and application of statistical and pharmacoepidemiologic methods. Prior to starting his PhD, he completed an MSc in Medical Statistics (Biostatistics) at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and an undergraduate degree in Applied Statistics at the University of Toronto. More information about Nick’s research, education, and past work experience can be found here: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3171-7541
Lead of Cohort Studies and Community Engagement
Jolene is CDPE’s Lead of Cohort Studies and Community Engagement. With roots in harm reduction and program management going back to the Downtown East Side of Vancouver over a decade ago with the Portland Hotel Society and Insite, Jolene is committed to serving populations that are substance-using, marginalized, oppressed, with histories of homelessness and complex medical challenges including HIV and Hep C. Safer Opioid Supply, safe injection spaces, accessibility, community engagement including centering those with lived/living experience has been the focus of Jolene’s work in community.
Research Volunteer
Nimesha is a research volunteer currently conducting a literature scan on the intersection between equity and the cannabis retail market. She has formerly completed an internship with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, specifically with the International Narcotics Control Board in which she helped with their cannabis portfolio. She is also a Master of Public Policy candidate at the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy and holds a bachelor’s degree in Criminology, Law and Society. She has previously worked in numerous non-profit organizations and social enterprises focusing on Canada’s immigrant-serving sector and mental health. She is highly interested in policy areas concerning drugs, youth justice and child welfare.
Research Volunteer
Emily is a Research Volunteer at the CDPE, supporting the evaluation of drug-checking services related to potent Nitazene synthetic opioids detected in Canada’s unregulated drug supply. Emily is completing a Master of Public Health at the University of Guelph and holds a Bachelor of Arts in Global Development Studies and Life Sciences from Queen’s University. She has extensive research experience in mental health and addiction, driving her interest in drug policy. Emily is additionally passionate about improving maternal and infant health, particularly among refugees.
Research Coordinator
Zoë Greenwald is a Research Coordinator at the CDPE. She is an epidemiologist contributing to diverse projects stemming from a longitudinal cohort of people who use drugs in Toronto. Zoë is currently pursuing her PhD in Epidemiology at the Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, and holds a Master of Science in Epidemiology and a Bachelor of Arts & Sciences from McGill University. Her research interests lie in infectious disease epidemiology (particularly the treatment and prevention of Hepatitis C, HIV and other sexually transmitted and blood borne infections), harm reduction, and health disparities research.
Research Assistant
Mia is an interviewer (Research Assistant II) at CDPE working on community outreach and conducting interviews with a longitudinal cohort of people who use drugs in Toronto (TDOT). Her experience comes from being a frontline harm reduction worker in downtown Toronto. She is a PhD candidate in the Social Policy stream in Policy Studies at Toronto Metropolitan University. She specializes in community-based participatory research methods and critical policy studies methodology and has been involved in community-based research projects in many different ways as a research assistant and project coordinator. Mia has a diploma in social work and an MA in Immigration Studies where she did research in the areas of immigration and policing, specifically on undocumented migrants, sanctuary city policy and police jurisdiction. Her current research is focused on education policy, anti-racism strategies and harm reduction. Mia deeply believes in the core values of harm reduction and enjoys bike riding and spending time with her three kids.
Co-op Student
Naomi is an undergraduate psychology student at York University, currently working with the CDPE team through the York University Health Equity Research Scholar Initiative. She has hands-on experience in harm reduction and working with people who use drugs (PWUD) in community health settings, shelters, and youth justice services. Naomi is passionate about addressing healthcare disparities in the Black community, through social and structural determinants of health such as drug use, exposure to over-policing, access to medical care, and mental health support for Black LGBTQ+ individuals.
Research Program Manager
Layla Jabbour is the Operations Manager at the CDPE. She is a central resource for CDPE programs, projects, and staff. Layla provides strategic leadership to develop, improve, and sustain the operational effectiveness and efficiency of the CDPE. She is accountable for the financial portfolio and programmatic reporting of the organization, as well as representing CDPE at MAP, Research Administration and Hospital meetings related to research operations. Layla brings over diverse experience in research, policy and frontline service delivery with diverse communities and stakeholders. She approaches her work with a passion for justice, anti-racism and harm reduction practices. Layla holds a Master of Social Work from York University and a bachelor in Community Planning from the University of Waterloo.
Administrative Assistant
Anaita Kharwanwala is an Administrative Assistant at the CDPE. Her responsibilities mainly involve supporting the Executive Director and the administrative function of the Centre. She supports the team in their various projects, including the implementation of Toronto’s Drug Checking Service, tracking knowledge translation activities, managing the Centre’s website and social media presence, and other communications activities. Anaita graduated with a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Ottawa and completed her Post-Graduate Certificate in Human Resources Management from Humber College.
Research Volunteer
Julia Ma is a Research Volunteer for the drug checking evaluation project at the CDPE. Her interest in harm reduction drug policy stems from front-line experience working with people who use drugs in community shelters, witnessing the profound and unique impact systems-level policies can have on individuals. She is passionate about finding ways to work alongside communities to develop equity-oriented solutions to the health disparities they face. Julia holds a Bachelor’s in Health Sciences and is currently a student in the MSc in Global Health program at McMaster University.
Nazlee Maghsoudi is the Manager of the Policy Impact Unit at the CDPE, having formerly acted as Knowledge Translation Manager. She has been deeply involved in the development of evidence-based drug policies at the grassroots, local, national, and international levels since 2013. Nazlee is Chairperson of the Executive Committee of the New York NGO Committee on Drugs, a global committee that supports civil society engagement on drug policy at the United Nations and represents 100+ organizations. She is also a Strategic Advisor at Canadian Students for Sensible Drug Policy, having formerly acted as Chair of the Board of Directors. Nazlee is a PhD candidate in Health Services Research at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation at the University of Toronto, and holds a Bachelor of Commerce from Queen’s University and a Master of Global Affairs from the University of Toronto.
Research Coordinator
Lucas Martignetti is a Research Coordinator at the CDPE, where he supports the evaluation of safer opioid supply pilot programs across Canada. He has experience working with people who use drugs as a Harm Reduction Outreach Worker, providing safer drug use and overdose prevention supplies and education. He has research experience related to overdose prevention, and health inequity experienced by people who use drugs, who are experiencing homelessness and poverty, and who are newcomers to Canada. He holds a Masters of Health Science in Community, Public and Population Health from Ontario Tech University, where he is currently pursuing a PhD in the same field.
Heather McLean is a Research Assistant at the CDPE, responsible for community outreach and conducting interviews with a longitudinal cohort of people who use drugs in Toronto. Heather has experience in early phase clinical research with INC Research and Syneos Health, where she specialized in first in human substance use studies as the screening unit administrator and first point of contact for participants. Before Syneos closed their Toronto clinic, Heather was training in their screening results department. She also has extensive experience in telephone research where she most recently was a team leader, which involved training a group of 65 interviewers and editing the collected data to be inputted into the transportation database. Heather graduated from Central Technical School.
Post Doctoral Fellow
Sanjana is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the CDPE focusing on the centre’s T-DOT cohort. Her research focuses on advancing evidence-based efforts to support the health and wellbeing of communities facing longstanding marginalization. She possesses abundant experience managing the data-to-day operations of research studies and has successfully supported the acquisition of numerous grants to conduct community-based research in the areas of HIV, harm reduction, and substance use. Sanjana is a skilled quantitative and qualitative researcher, with experience in protocol and research instrument development, data collection, analyses, and knowledge translation. Her work is guided by anti-oppression, anti-racist, and equity-based approaches and informed by her interdisciplinary background. She holds an MPH from the University of Toronto and a PhD from the University of British Columbia.
Research Assistant
Melanie is an interviewer responsible for community outreach and conducting interviews for the T-DOT cohort studies. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Toronto Metropolitan University as well as a Graduate Certificate in Addictions and Mental Health from Humber College. Her professional harm reduction journey started with the TRIP! Project doing on site harm reduction outreach at night clubs and festivals. She later moved on to doing street and community outreach in order to provide services for people where they are most comfortable. She is very passionate about creating a safe space for people who use drugs to share their expert knowledge and experience in order to help inform policy change.
Research Assistant
Shahryar is a research assistant at the Centre for Drug Policy Evaluation (CDPE) with a background in pharmaceuticals. He contributes to the team’s efforts on safer supply projects and other ongoing initiatives at the center. Shahryar earned his Pharm.D degree in 2020 and subsequently began his research career in health research, addiction, and safer supply programs, alongside his work in pharmaceutical sciences.
Data Scientist
Yingbo is a Data Scientist at CDPE. With a skill set covering administrative and clinical data acquisition, evaluation, and analysis, he supports and assists researchers and policy-makers to uncover meaningful trends and patterns within complex datasets. While working on pre-dialysis policy project at Ontario Renal Network, he transformed raw information into actionable insights that facilitated the well-informed decisions. Having collaborated extensively at Canadian Institute for Health Information, Ontario Health, and IC/ES, Yingbo understands the unique challenges and opportunities presented by healthcare and clinical data. He holds a Master of Science in Statistics from Baruch College, New York.
Research Assistant
Frishta Nafeh supports the National Safer Supply Evaluation. Previously, Frishta worked with the Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse (CRISM) Ontario branch where she helped implement several projects focused on the influence of COVID-19 on people who use drugs. Frishta holds a Master of Public Health from Queen’s University.
Research Assistant
Tanisha Palmer is a Research Assistant at the CDPE, providing administrative and outreach support to the T-DOT cohort studies. Tanisha has front-line experience working with people who use drugs (PWUD) across different service sectors such as community health, housing and overdose prevention sites. Tanisha’s passion lies in harm reduction education, particularly geared towards youth and knowledge translation aiming to improve existing services that support people who use drugs, particularly those who are under and unhoused. She is passionate about community engagement, with a health equity lens to address the gaps in healthcare delivery for our most vulnerable community members. Tanisha holds a Master of Arts in Social Justice and Community Engagement.
Research Coordinator
Bijan Rafat is a Research Coordinator at the CDPE. He is responsible for coordinating the activities related to two studies: PRIMER – a multi-national study that aims to identify whether specific interventions and factors influence the risk that individuals begin injecting drugs and national SOS – a study that evaluates the safer opioid supply pilot programs that have been implemented across Canada. Bijan has been involved in research related to opioid use and in cannabis research including a study that focused on the evaluation of the role of cannabis in reducing opioid use in chronic pain patients. His experience includes designing and coordinating randomized-controlled trials and observational studies. He holds a Master of Science in Pharmaceutical Sciences from the University of Toronto.
Research Assistant
Indhu Rammohan is a Research Assistant at the CDPE, where she assists the team in interpreting study-related data. Indhu developed an interest in harm reduction and drug policy during her undergraduate training in global health. She co-founded the University of Toronto Chapter of the Canadian Coalition for Global Health Research, which aims to promote health equity by facilitating knowledge translation and collaboration between students and researchers in global health. She was also involved in the University of Toronto International Health Program where she played a key role in organizing U of T World AIDS Day 2015 and wrote for the UTIHP Editorial. Indhu is currently pursuing a MSc in Health Services Research, in the Health Policy concentration, at the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation at the University of Toronto.
Visiting Scholar
Kate Roberts is a Visiting Scholar with CDPE. She is currently a doctoral candidate at Bryn Mawr College of Social Work and Social Research, her dissertation utilizes qualitative methods to understand socio-political factors that impact drug use and drug use assistance among women and gender minorities. Kate is also an affiliated researcher with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and works on projects related to knowledge of severe infections, such as endocarditis and osteomyelitis, among persons who use and inject drugs. Kate received her M.S.W. from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. She received her M.S.W. at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and has 7 years of experience as a clinical social worker. Kate also holds an M.A. from Duke University, studying the history of race, gender, and medical ethics in American religious contexts.
Research Assistant
Valeria is a research assistant at CDPE working on quantitative analysis for the TDOT cohort study. Pursuing a PhD in Data Science, she has five years of experience as a consultant biostatistician for Spanish hospitals. Valeria’s expertise lies in applying various statistical methods to complex health science challenges. She is an enthusiast of public health and epidemiology and has a profound interest in utilizing data to drive positive change.
Associate Scientist
Dr. Ayden Scheim is an Affiliate Scientist with CDPE and Co-PI of the Ontario Integrated Supervised Injection Services cohort study in Toronto (OiSIS-Toronto). Previously, as a postdoctoral researcher with CDPE, he led a program of systematic reviews on drug policy and harm reduction interventions. Dr. Scheim is currently an Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health in Philadelphia and an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at Western University. He holds a PhD in Epidemiology and Biostatistics (2017) from Western University and was a Canadian Institutes of Health Research and Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of California, San Diego.
Research Assistant
Hae Seung Sung is a Research Assistant at CDPE with a background in geography and geospatial analysis. Before joining CDPE, she served as a Data Scientist at the Atlanta Regional Commission, a governmental agency overseeing regional planning in Metro Atlanta, where her expertise in geospatial data influenced regional planning, regional data literacy, and development strategies. Hae Seung holds a Master of Science in Geography from Georgia State University, Atlanta, and a Master of Landscape Architecture from Seoul National University, Seoul, further enriching her multidisciplinary perspective in her current research endeavours.
Leads
Racial Equity Lead
Dr. Akwasi Owusu-Bempah, PhD, is a criminologist and sociologist who studies race, inequality and social policy. He is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Toronto and a Senior Fellow at Massey College. He holds Affiliate Scientist status at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and serves as Director of Research for the Campaign for Cannabis Amnesty. Dr. Owusu-Bempah began his academic career in the United States at Indiana University, Bloomington. Prior to becoming a professor, he held positions with Canada’s National Judicial Institute, the Public Health Agency of Canada, and the Ontario Ministry of the Solicitor General. He is frequently sought out to provide commentary and advice to public and private sector agencies, community organizations, and media outlets on a variety of topics. Dr. Owusu-Bempah currently serves as an advisor to Red Light Holland.
Our Partners
The CDPE has collaborated extensively with a wide range of organizational partners working in the drug policy sector.
British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS
British Columbia Centre on Substance Use
Canadian Drug Policy Coalition
Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Misuse
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Dapaanz – Addiction Practitioners Association of Aotearoa New Zealand
Drug Policy Alliance
Global Commission on Drug Policy
Global Drug Policy Observatory
Health Canada (Drug Analysis Service)
HIV Legal Network
Igarapé Institute
International Drug Policy Consortium
Mexico Unida Contra la Deliquencia
NZ Drug Foundation
Office of the Chief Coroner
Ontario College of Art and Design University
Ontario Harm Reduction Network
Parkdale Queen West Community Health Centre
Public Health Ontario
Sandy Hill Community Health Centre
South Riverdale Community Health Centre
St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto
Street Health
The Canadian Association of People who Use Drugs
The Works
Thunderbird Partnership Foundation
Toronto Harm Reduction Alliance
Toronto Paramedic Services
Transform Drug Policy Foundation
Trip! Project
University of British Columbia
University of California, San Diego
University of Toronto
Viva Rio
Government and Intergovernmental Organizations
Government of Brazil
Government of Canada
Government of Mexico
Government of New Zealand
Government of Switzerland
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care
Toronto Public Health
United Nations University
Financial Supporters
The work of the CDPE is funded by a combination of various sources including granting agencies, governments, and public charities. We thank the following agencies for the support of our work.
Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction (CCSA)
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
CIHR Canadian HIV Trials Network (CTN)
Canadian Research Initiative in Substance Matters (CRISM)
Government of Ontario: Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science
Health Canada
MAC AIDS Fund
National Institute on Drug Abuse
New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF)
Open Society Foundations
Ontario Cannabis Store
St. Michael’s Hospital, Unity Health Toronto
St. Michael’s Hospital Foundation