Micro-Diploma in Applied Health Services Research
Community Health Sciences
Head: Michelle Driedger
Campus Address/General Office: 408 - 727 McDermot Avenue
Telephone: 204-789-3655
Email Address: mtp@umanitoba.ca
Website: https://umanitoba.ca/explore/programs-of-study/micro-diploma-applied-health-services-research
Academic Staff: Please see the CHS website for Faculty information.
Micro-Diploma in Applied Health Services Research
The Manitoba Training Program for Health Services Research (MTP-HSR) provides applied health services research training to an interdisciplinary group of thesis-based MSc and PhD students. Graduates of the program will have a unique platform of research skills for use in their future careers as academic researchers, clinician scientists, or healthcare planners.
Admission Information
Admission to the Faculty of Graduate Studies
Application and Admission Procedures are found in the Academic Guide.
Micro-Diploma in Applied Health Services Research Admission Requirements
Open to students enrolled in the Faculty of Graduate Studies, in a thesis-based Master of Science or Doctor of Philosophy degree program focused on health services research, as defined by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR).
Application Information
Students should complete and submit their online application with supporting documentation by the date indicated on the Micro-Diploma in Applied Health Services Research program of study page.
Degree Requirements
The program requires students to complete three courses for a total of six credit hours:
CHSC 7320 Organization and Financing of the Canadian Health Care System,
CHSC 7730 Topics in Health Services Research, and
CHSC 7900 Manitoba Training Program Field Placement
Students are required to achieve a minimum grade of “C+” in mandatory courses.
Expected Time to Completion: 1 academic year (3 consecutive terms)
Registration Information
Students should familiarize themselves with the Faculty of Graduate Studies ‘GRAD’ courses applicable to their program. If you have questions about which GRAD course(s) to register in, please consult your home department/unit.
Regulations
Program Requirements
A Graduate Micro-Diploma is a short, flexible program of study focused on core knowledge in a field or interdisciplinary field of study at the graduate level. A Graduate Micro-Diploma consists of a minimum of six (6) credit hours to a maximum of nine (9) credit hours of coursework at the 7000-level or above. It may be stand-alone and/or embedded in a graduate degree. A minimum of six (6) credit hours must be delivered by The University of Manitoba.
All students should consult department/unit supplementary regulations for specific details regarding a particular Graduate Micro-Diploma.
Admission
Students who are eligible to be considered for direct admission to a program of study leading to the Graduate Micro-Diploma include:
- Graduates of four (4)-year undergraduate degree programs (or equivalent as deemed by the Faculty of Graduate Studies) from:
- Canadian institutions empowered by law to grant degrees; or
- Colleges and universities outside Canada which are officially recognized by the Faculty of Graduate Studies.
- Graduates from first-cycle Bologna compliant degrees.
- Students who have completed a Pre-Master’s program from:
- The University of Manitoba (see General Regulations - Pre-Master's); or
- Canadian institutions empowered by law to grant degrees; or
- Colleges and universities outside Canada which are officially recognized by The Faculty of Graduate Studies.
All students applying for a Graduate Micro-Diploma program must have attained a minimum GPA of 3.0 in the last two (2) previous years of full-time university study (60 credit hours). This includes those applying for direct admission and those entering from a Pre-Master’s program. Students who meet the minimum requirements for admission to the Faculty of Graduate Studies are not guaranteed admission.
Note: This is the minimum requirement of the Faculty of Graduate Studies and departments/units may have higher standards and additional criteria.
Performance in Coursework
Students can consult Student Accessibility Services (SAS) if accommodations are required for coursework (see Accessibility Policy and Procedures).
A minimum degree grade point average (DGPA) of 3.0 with no grade below C+ must be maintained to continue in the Faculty of Graduate Studies. Departments/Units may specify, in their supplementary regulations, standards that are higher than those of the Faculty of Graduate Studies. Students who fail to maintain the specified grades or DGPA will be Required to Withdraw unless a department/unit recommends remedial action. Any such action must be approved by the Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Studies or designate.
Requirements for Remedial Action Plan
A student may be permitted to remediate deficiencies in grades by repeating the course or replacing it with an equivalent substitute course as determined by the department/unit. In the event that a substitute course is used for remediation, the substituted course must be at the same or higher level as the failed course (e.g., at the graduate level for a failed graduate-level course). Each failed course may be repeated or replaced only once, to a maximum of three (3) credit hours of coursework. If a course is repeated or replaced, the highest grade obtained will be used in the determination of the degree grade point average. Students receiving a grade of C or less in more than three (3) credit hours of coursework are usually Required to Withdraw from the Micro-Diploma, unless otherwise stated in the department/unit’s supplementary regulations. A student may also be permitted the opportunity to improve a low DGPA as determined by the Graduate Chair of the student’s department/unit through the registration and completion of additional course(s).
Students are usually expected to complete remedial action by the end of the subsequent term.
Graduate students are not permitted to repeat a previously passed course, unless the department/unit recommends that course(s) be re-taken if they have lapsed or expired (refer to Master's Degree General Regulations and Doctor of Philosophy General Regulations).
Note:
In exceptional circumstances, the department/unit may appeal to the Faculty of Graduate Studies for approval of remedial recommendation(s) falling outside those prescribed above.
Supplemental exams are not permitted to students in the Graduate Micro-Diploma program, unless otherwise stated in the department/unit’s supplementary regulations.
Time in Program
The expected time-to-completion for students in the Micro-Diploma program is one (1) academic year (i.e., three (3) consecutive terms). Micro-Diploma students are subject to the same re-registration requirements as all other graduate students. Enrollment in a micro-diploma does not extend time in diploma/degree programs.
Transfer Credit
Courses within a program of study may be taken elsewhere and transferred for credit at The University of Manitoba. Students must make a formal application to take courses elsewhere. All such courses:
- must be approved for transfer to the program of study by the department/unit and the Faculty of Graduate Studies before the student may register for them;
- are considered on an individual basis;
- cannot usually be used for credit towards another degree;
- may not exceed three (3) credit hours of coursework required of the student’s Graduate Micro-Diploma program at The University of Manitoba, so long as six (6) credit hours of the Graduate Micro-Diploma program is taken at the University of Manitoba.
Recognition for Credit
Graduate-level courses completed as part of a Graduate Micro-Diploma may be recognized toward a Graduate Diploma or graduate degree program (where appropriate) and subject to the Senate approved program regulations. Graduate Micro-Diplomas may be stackable or laddered (refer to definitions per the Certificate and Diploma Framework) into Graduate Diplomas or graduate degree programs in same or related fields of study.
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Courses
The purpose of this course is to help students develop the knowledge and skills to understand and improve Canadian healthcare. The course provides an introduction to the way the Canadian health system is organized and financed; covers key policy issues and controversies; and examines the challenge of change.
PR/CR: A minimum grade of C is required unless otherwise indicated.
Prerequisite: Students outside CHS require instructor permission.
This course will expose students to select health services research topics that are particularly relevant in Manitoba and Canada. Students are expected to actively engage in seminars led by health services researchers and decision-makers, and also provide informative presentations in their own area of research. Students will also gain knowledge about various communication and knowledge translation strategies. Students outside CHS require instructor permission.
The aim of the Manitoba training program (MTP) field placement is to highlight the relationship between learning and application of health services research principles and practices through the integration of course work and supervised field work undertaken in local and provincial public health settings. University of Manitoba students accepted into the Manitoba training program are eligible to register for this course; instructor permission is required.