The Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) is the major federal agency responsible for funding health research in Canada. It was established by an Act of Parliament in April 2000 to create new knowledge according to internationally accepted scientific standards and translate this into improved health for Canadians, more effective health services and products, and a stronger Canadian health care system. It replaced the Medical Research Council of Canada, which had overseen Canadian medical research since 1969. CIHR reports to Parliament through the
Minister of Health. The
Strategic Plan for the period 2021–2031 "establishes the context that will allow Canadian health research to be internationally recognized as inclusive, collaborative, transparent, culturally safe, and focused on real world impact." Five priority areas were identified: • Advance research excellence in all its diversity • Strengthen Canadian health research capacity • Accelerate the self-determination of Indigenous peoples in health research • Pursue
health equity through research • Integrate evidence in health decisions
2024 funding reform: Following a student-led advocacy campaign (see Controversies, below), the 2024
Canadian federal budget included the largest increase to graduate and postdoctoral scholarships in over 20 years, significantly raising both the number and value of CIHR-funded awards.
Presidents •
Alan Bernstein, Founding President (2000-2007) • Roderick McInnes, Acting President (2017-2018) • Michael Strong (2018-2025) • Paul C. Hébert, appointed in January 2025 for a five-year term == Governance ==