Dr. Marisa Battistella

Associate Professor

Build a Statement of Purpose

Generate a tailored SOP for Dr. Marisa Battistella. Improve your application with a focused, well-structured draft.

Biography

Marisa Battistella is a pharmacy clinician scientist specializing in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Her research program focuses on translational studies addressing unmet clinical needs across the entire spectrum of pharmacotherapy care for CKD patients. The goals include pre-prescribing strategies utilizing genomics for drug selection, deprescribing methodologies, and managing polypharmacy to improve patient outcomes. CKD impacts millions of Canadians, presenting patients with increased risks of morbidity and mortality due to associated chronic conditions requiring long-term medication management. Battistella’s work emphasizes optimizing medications for individual patients through a personalized approach to medication management, conducting multidisciplinary research encompassing genomics and pharmacokinetics to enhance pharmacotherapy management. Her team investigates drug metabolism variations between CKD patients and healthy individuals, ensuring safe antibiotic prescribing practices for CKD patients, and developing algorithms to assist clinicians in medication optimization for this population. Battistella’s unique expertise in nephrology combined with her clinical teaching elevates her research on pharmacogenomics and pharmacokinetics.

Research Interests

Requirements for University of Toronto

Master Program
Requirements
GPA Requirement
Required:3.3
IELTS
Listening
Required:6.5
Reading
Required:6.5
Writing
Required:6.5
Speaking
Required:6.5
Overall
Required:7
TOEFL
Listening
Required:22
Reading
Required:22
Writing
Required:22
Speaking
Required:22
Total
Required:93
Prerequisites
Appropriate four-year bachelor's degree Background in sociological theory and statistics preferred
Application Checklist
  • Transcripts
  • Two letters of reference
  • Statement of intent
  • Writing sample
  • Curriculum Vitae
Specialization Notes

Department of Sociology