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The Temerty Faculty of Medicine at the University of Toronto is at the centre of one of North America’s largest biomedical research, education and clinical care networks. With 14 fully affiliated research-intensive hospitals — and dozens more community and clinical care sites — Temerty Medicine offers unparalleled opportunities in Canada’s most dynamic city for our more than 9,000 faculty and staff and 7,000 learners at all levels.

Jan 7, 2026
A new study by researchers at the University of Toronto provides data on the potential of automated vehicles to improve road safety in various adoption scenarios. 
Jan 5, 2026
Psychiatrist and sleep medicine specialist Michael Mak shares how technology and training are revolutionizing sleep treatment, and why philanthropic support for the field is so important to him.
Jan 2, 2026
A new U of T-led study has discovered a possible biomarker linked to multiple sclerosis disease progression that could help identify patients most likely to benefit from new drugs.
Medical Sciences Building, Temerty Plaza

2025 Dean's Report

From Faculty leadership

Reflections on global partnership and shared learning

As the year draws to a close, I’ve been thinking about the many ways our faculty contributes to global health. This reflection has been shaped, in part, by my recent trip to Kigali, Rwanda, for the Africa Health Collaborative Convening, generously supported by the Mastercard Foundation — an experience that left a lasting impression on me. While in Rwanda, I heard about the country’s ongoing efforts, since the 1994 genocide, to foster a shared national identity grounded in the message “We are all Rwandans.” Listening to these reflections underscored for me how essential strong systems — health, education, governance and community partnerships — are to building a resilient society that strives to care for everyone.

Giving Back

The impact of donor support begins by enhancing the work of our clinicians, researchers and trainees but then resonates throughout the health-care system and ultimately serves to improve human health.
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