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Dr. Dzifa Dordunoo

Dr. Dzifa  Dordunoo
Position
Associate Professor, Acting DirectorSchool of Nursing
Contact
Office: HSD B204nursingdirector@uvic.ca250-721-6284
Credentials

RN, PhD

Area of expertise

Metal hypersensitivity, Evidence-synthesis, Heart failure, sickle cell and critical care, JBI systematic reviews, racism

Dzifa Dordunoo PhD, RN, a native of Dzodze, Ghana, is associate professor at the University of Victoria, school of nursing. As a clinician, Dzifa has over 20 years of varied clinical practice experience working in general medicine and coronary care units as well as outpatient clinics (Heart failure and Sickle Cell).

Dr. Dordunoo has spent the past decade as a nurse educator. Having began her teaching career in 2011 as a clinical instructor at John Hopkins School of Nursing, she later taught at the University of Maryland, School of Nursing before joining the UVic School of Nursing in 2017. Dzifa teaches a variety of courses at the undergraduate and graduate level, particularly courses in cardiac surgical nursing, quantitative and qualitative analysis and research methodology.

Dr. Dordunoo is the Director of the University of Victoria (UVic) Centre for Evidence-Informed Nursing and Healthcare (CEiNHC), A JBI Centre of Excellence. She also serves on the BSN curriculum committee and the PhD curriculum committee

As a scholar and researcher, she has a strong research interest in improving access and quality of health services. Her program of research leverages dissemination and implementation science with patient-centered lens to address factors that influence quality and safety of care and outcomes, using both quantitative and qualitative methodologies. Dzifa worked on several investigator-initiated studies and phase III/IV FDA clinical trials with implantable devices. Her recent projects have focused on metal hypersensitivity and racism as predictors of health outcomes. Her interest in metal hypersensitivity grew after she was involved in a clinical case of a patient with extensive allergy who experienced stent restenosis. She completed several projects that demonstrated a lack of awareness among healthcare workers about hypersensitivity reactions and that hypersensitivity reaction is not routinely discussed pre-operatively. She has also completed several projects on racism, highlighting the misrepresentation of race in health research and urging the need to shift the focus on racism as a determinant of health outcomes.  

Dr Dordunoo earned her bachelor's degree (with distinction) from University of Victoria (Canada) and holds a master’s degree from Duke University (USA) with post-master's certificate in clinical research management and teaching. She completed her doctoral education at the University of Maryland Baltimore (USA). She is currently the president of the Coalition of African, Caribbean and Black Nurses in British Columbia.

Email dzifa@uvic.ca for more information about her research program. 

Publications

Peer-reviewed

Books, Chapters, Monographs

Accepted Abstracts

Opinion editorials/commentaries