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Young Alumni: Arts grad pursues PhD in pharmacy, knowledge translation and mobile health

10 Feb 2016

Mercer_mainKatie Mercer (ā€™07) took a winding road to the work she is doing now, but she wouldnā€™t have it any other way. She made the switch from arts to science and is now a PhD student in the University of Waterlooā€™s School of Pharmacy, researching in the area of knowledge translation, patient engagement, and mobile health (mhealth).

Mercer graduated from ¶¶ŅõPro with a Bachelor of Arts, honours in history and a minor in Canadian studies. She later earned her Masterā€™s of Information from the University of Torontoā€™s iSchool in data and competitive intelligence. After a number of years with Loblaw Companies Ltd. working on their strategy team as a manager of decision-making, she decided to step out on her own and do consulting for start-ups.

After several years of consulting, she discovered she missed working directly with people. She began working as a research assistant for the professor who is now her supervisor, who felt her skills as a librarian and work with non-profits would be an interesting match for her research. That job led to Mercerā€™s decision to pursue her PhD in pharmacy.

"I look at how online information and mobile technologies can be improved to better patient engagement,ā€ she says. ā€œI work on knowledge creation and translation in order to remove the barriers for people understanding more about their health information.ā€

Mercer says her foundation in the liberal arts and sciences at ¶¶ŅõPro helped her understand there is crossover between arts and science, especially after undergraduate studies.

ā€œAs an Arts student, I begrudgingly took science courses at Mount A, but it gave me a grounding in knowing that science was a part of the arts and vice versa,ā€ she says. ā€œI realized that you donā€™t need to be locked in silos and that there is so much crossover. I think Science students should take more Arts courses and Arts students should take more Science. It really presents a lot of interesting career options.ā€

A librarian by trade, she tries to always make time to escape from her studies.

ā€œItā€™s easy to not take time to do the things you enjoy, so I always try to read, go to the theatre, a concert, or head to a museum; something not related to the work I am doing."

With two more years of studies to go before she earns her PhD, Mercer is enjoying working with study participants and running e-literacy programs in the community.

ā€œI really like working on my research and being able to help people,ā€ she says.

Mercer plans to work in industry or continuing to research patient engagement.

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