Tara Kiran

MD, MSc, CCFP, FCFP

Scientist

Biography

Tara Kiran is the Fidani Chair in Improvement and Innovation and Vice-Chair Quality and Innovation at the Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto. Much of her research has focused on evaluating the impact of Ontario’s primary care reforms on quality of care. For example, her work has tried to understand whether organizing and paying physicians differently makes it more likely for people to get recommended care.

Dr. Kiran has a passion for improving the system she works in. She practices family medicine at the St. Michael’s Hospital Academic Family Health Team. She led the team’s quality improvement program from 2011 to 2018 including efforts to understand patient experience and engage patients in service design. Under her leadership, the team began to systematically collect and report more than 20 indicators of quality and made significant improvements in a number of areas — for example, it became easier for patients to get a timely appointment and more people started receiving recommended cancer screening. In all her work, Dr. Kiran strives to ensure that everyone is getting the care they need, regardless of their income, gender, race, length of time in Canada, or the community they live in. Recent initiatives include trying to improve care for people facing stigma in society such as those who are dependent on opioid medications and those with Hepatitis C.

Over the years, Dr. Kiran has held a number of local and regional leadership roles including as the Board Chair for her Family Health Team, as the Provincial Clinical Lead for the Ontario Diabetes Strategy, and as a Primary Care Physician Lead for the Toronto Central Local Health Integration Network. In 2013, Dr. Kiran received the CIHR Rising Star Award from the Institute for Health Services and Policy Research. In 2015, her article on payment incentives for cancer screening was selected to receive the Outstanding Family Medicine Research Article Award from the College of Family Physicians of Canada.

Dr. Kiran is an Associate Professor at the University of Toronto in the Faculty of Medicine and the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation. She is a Scientist in MAP Centre for Urban Health Solutions at St. Michael’s Hospital and an Adjunct Scientist at ICES.

Please note: Dr. Kiran is not taking any summer students.

Recent Publications

  1. Kiran, T, Thelen, R, Szymanski, K, Daneshvarfard, M, Rajendra, KL, Lim, J et al.. Public priorities for primary care in Canada: Report on insights and actionable recommendations from 5 provincial reference panels. Can Fam Physician. 2025;71 (6):396-405. doi: 10.46747/cfp.7106396. PubMed PMID:40523745 .
  2. Terpou, BA, Lapointe-Shaw, L, Wang, R, Martin, D, Tadrous, M, Bhatia, S et al.. Designed for simplicity, used for complexity: The systemic pressures shaping walk-in clinic practices and outcomes. PLoS One. 2025;20 (6):e0325793. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0325793. PubMed PMID:40489477 PubMed Central PMC12148145.
  3. Ansari, H, Glazier, RH, Schultz, SE, Green, ME, Premji, K, Frymire, E et al.. Family Physicians in Focused Practice in Ontario, Canada: A Population-Level Study of Trends From 1993/1994 Through 2021/2022. Ann Fam Med. 2025;23 (3):181-190. doi: 10.1370/afm.240377. PubMed PMID:40425467 PubMed Central PMC12120165.
  4. Corriveau, B, Denault, G, Wang, R, Beyer, A, Daneshvarfard, M, Breton, M et al.. Sociodemographic variation in use of and preferences for digital technologies among patients in primary care: Results from the OurCare national survey. Can Fam Physician. 2025;71 (5):324-336. doi: 10.46747/cfp.7105324. PubMed PMID:40368619 PubMed Central PMC12087552.
  5. Shuldiner, J, Shah, NU, Bar-Ziv, S, Kaplan, DM, Green, ME, Bahniwal, R et al.. Practice Facilitation to Support Primary Care Physicians With COVID-19 Vaccine Uptake: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Netw Open. 2025;8 (5):e259967. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.9967. PubMed PMID:40366656 PubMed Central PMC12079287.
  6. Ruco, A, Khalil, A, Ledwos, C, Tinmouth, J, Kiran, T, Lofters, A et al.. Exploring barriers and enablers to implementation of cancer screening among primary care professionals seeing marginalized patients. BMC Public Health. 2025;25 (1):1578. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-22835-9. PubMed PMID:40296079 PubMed Central PMC12036152.
  7. Kiran, T, Devotta, K, Desveaux, L, Ramji, N, Weyman, K, Lam Antoniades, M et al.. Peer-Coaching for Family Physicians to Close the Intention-to-Action Gap. J Am Board Fam Med. 2024;37 (6):996-1008. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2023.230489R2. PubMed PMID:40118552 .
  8. Lavergne, MR, Easley, J, McDonald, T, Grudniewicz, A, Welton, S, Austin, N et al.. Examining experiences and system impacts of publicly funded episodic virtual care: protocol for a cross-provincial mixed methods study. BMJ Open. 2025;15 (3):e099098. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-099098. PubMed PMID:40037675 PubMed Central PMC11881198.
  9. Martin, D, Razak, F, Bayoumi, I, Eissa, A, Green, ME, Glazier, RH et al.. Primary care in the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond: Lessons from Ontario. Can Fam Physician. 2025;71 (1):31-40. doi: 10.46747/cfp.710131. PubMed PMID:39843197 PubMed Central PMC11753269.
  10. Salahub, C, Austin, PC, Bai, L, Berthelot, S, Bhatia, RS, Bird, C et al.. Health Care Utilization After a Visit to a Within-Group Family Physician vs a Walk-In Clinic Physician. Ann Fam Med. 2024;22 (6):483-491. doi: 10.1370/afm.3181. PubMed PMID:39586695 PubMed Central PMC11588379.
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Affiliations & Other Activities

  • Staff Physician, Department of Family and Community Medicine, St. Michael’s Hospital
  • Board Chair and Quality Improvement Program Director, St. Michael’s Hospital Academic Family Health Team
  • Associate Professor, Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Toronto
  • Adjunct Scientist, Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences