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Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Researcher's experience with rheumatoid arthritis inspires new study - CBC.ca

A Sudbury researcher's experience with rheumatoid arthritis has inspired her to study what access to care looks like for patients in northern Ontario.

Nancy Lightfoot, a professor at both NOSM University and Laurentian University's School of Kinesiology and Health Sciences, has launched a new qualitative study on rheumatoid arthritis. 

"We're talking with people about their experiences with it," Lightfoot said.

"How it was like to access care, what types of medications that they take and their experiences interacting with family physicians, pharmacists and rheumatologists in northeastern and northwestern Ontario."

The Arthritis Society says rheumatoid arthritis "is an inflammatory disease that can affect multiple joints in the body." The society says about 300,000 Canadians have the disease.

Lightfoot said she started to feel joint pain about three years ago and was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis.

Her family doctor referred her to a rheumatologist in southern Ontario. 

"For a while my information was lost and I didn't get that first appointment with the rheumatologist for quite some time, which made me wonder about, well, what's happening for others?" she said.

While she said she has got great care from southern Ontario – once she connected with a physician – she added northern Ontario needs more rheumatologists.

NOSM said last year that northern Ontario was short 325 doctors, including 166 specialists. 

For her research project, Lightfoot said she and her colleagues, including co-researcher Dr. David Marsh, will interview patients, physicians and pharmacists in northern Ontario about their experiences with rheumatoid arthritis. 

The goal is to paint a picture of what care looks like in the region, and where there could be room for improvement.

"It's their experience with patients with rheumatoid arthritis and what suggestions that they have, for others and for other health care providers who treat and support and manage these patients," Lightfoot said.

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Monday, July 4, 2022

Toronto Public Health reduces COVID-19 vaccine clinic hours for summer - Global News

COVID-19 vaccination clinics in Toronto will operate on reduced opening hours through the summer, Toronto Public Health has announced.

In a tweet, the local health authority confirmed new hours will begin Monday morning at its vaccine clinics.

Click to play video: 'Ontario researchers focus on possible clue of long COVID' Ontario researchers focus on possible clue of long COVID
Ontario researchers focus on possible clue of long COVID

All six city-run vaccine clinics, including Metro Hall, will offer reduced hours. The move will “meet the needs of Toronto residents throughout the summer,” Toronto Public Health said.

The new hours, beginning Monday, are:

  • 1940 Eglinton Avenue: 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday
  • Cloverdale Mall: 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday
  • Crossroads: 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday
  • Metro Hall: 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday
  • Mitchell Field: 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday
  • Thorncliffe Park Community Hub: 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Sunday, July 3, 2022

Terminally ill Stratford woman using art to raise money for medical expenses - Stratford Beacon-Herald

Diane Sims, a terminally ill Stratford woman living with end-stage multiple sclerosis, is raising money for her medical expenses by selling greeting cards featuring her hand-drawn sketches as well as commissioned paintings.

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When Diane Sims’ doctors told her last spring she would likely only have three months to live, the Stratford woman living with multiple sclerosis who has endured numerous surgeries over her lifetime to remove cancerous tumours from her lower abdomen had a choice to make.

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She could let her prognosis chip away at her spirit and positive outlook on life, or she could continue doing what she loves.

As a journalist and author, Sims’ greatest passion has always been storytelling, but thanks to a lifelong love of art and some motivation and guidance from friend and renowned Manitoulin Island artist Ivan Wheale, Sims has embraced a new creative outlet through sketching and painting as a way to keep her mind off her health.

“Prior to (getting my prognosis) in June of 2020 … (Ivan) coaxed me to put paintbrush to canvas,” Sims said. “He just saw so much creativity in me, he said I want you to do this.”

Originally, Sims said she resisted the idea, having been told by her Grade 4 art teacher that she was awful at art — a comment that stuck with her for life and kept her from exploring the visual-arts medium. But when an artist of Wheale’s reputation and talent suggests taking up the paintbrush, Sims says it’s advice worth heeding.

About six months later, another friend sent Sims a copy of artist and author Betty Edwards’ book, Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, which she worked through over the course of seven months to teach herself how to sketch.

“I knew I was sick that winter. My doctor couldn’t figure it out, but I knew it,” Sims said. ” … I’d been a vegetarian since I had a bowel obstruction and I ate everything I thought was good for me. Finally, (at the end of March 2021), they did a CT (scan) and the whole ascending transverse descending colon was full of fiber. That’s when they found out that one side of my bowel was stuck to the wall and it’s because … I’ve had eight abdominal surgeries for cancer. … I had hundreds of adhesions (resulting from those surgeries).

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“And then there’s the MS. … The MS has really weakened (my bowel). So one side can’t really do anything because it’s stuck and the other side (is also) very weak now.”

Sims was in and out of hospital more than a dozen times last year and she has nurses and personal support workers come to her home several times a week. While trips to the hospital and homecare are covered by OHIP, she’s on a number of drugs prescribed by a world-renowned gastroenterologist in London that are not covered by insurance.

“And because of my condition, my medical expenses for medical supplies are very high every month,” Sims said.

With Wheale’s encouragement, Sims decided to turn six of her favourite sketches — which she draws from memory and photos she’s taken on her travels up to Manitoulin Island and elsewhere in the province — into greeting cards she is selling by commission through several retail outlets including Turners of Little Current on Manitoulin Island, as well as Blowes Stationary and Office Supplies and Treasures in Stratford.

“What I love on Manitoulin are the split-rail fences,” Sims said, referring to imagery featured in a few of the sketches she printed into cards. ” … I’ll be taking more pictures up there.”

While the greeting cards bring in a little extra money, Sims is also offering to paint on commission as a way to further cover her medical expenses. Anyone interested in commissioning a painting can contact Sims either by calling 226-921-4790 or emailing dianesims@rogers.com.

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And as if painting, sketching and continuing to work as a freelance journalist and author isn’t enough, Sims was also recently certified as a wedding officiant and has just launched her new business, Weddings on Wheels, not so much as a way to make some extra money, but as a way to inspire joy and gratitude.

“Part of living in gratitude and joy; that is an affirmation of life,” Sims said. “I think being able to solemnize a couple is an affirmation of life. It was on my heart for a couple of years to take this course, so I took a leap of faith and now I have the certificate and the official government license.”

The name for her business, Sims explained, came after a friend told her no one would hire a wedding officiant in a wheelchair. Sims, however, took that as a challenge to prove that people with disabilities can accomplish whatever they set their minds to.

“So I called my business Weddings on Wheels out of fun,” Sims said. “My professional photo shows the corner of my wheelchair but, as you can see, (my wheelchair) lifts to a regular height. … I am ready to go (and) I’ve been distributing businesses cards around town.

” … It’s part of the affirmation of gratitude and joy and my business card says, ‘Inspiring with joy and gratitude.’ ”

For more information on Weddings on Wheels, call 226-921-4790, email dianesimsweddingofficiant@gmail.com or visit dianesimsofficiant.com.

gsimmons@postmedia.com

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    Saturday, July 2, 2022

    For now, wary US treads water with transformed COVID-19 - Delta Optimist

    The fast-changing coronavirus has kicked off summer in the U.S. with lots of infections but relatively few deaths compared to its prior incarnations.

    COVID-19 is still killing hundreds of Americans each day, but is not nearly as dangerous as it was last fall and winter.

    “It’s going to be a good summer and we deserve this break,” said Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle.

    With more Americans shielded from severe illness through vaccination and infection, COVID-19 has transformed — for now at least — into an unpleasant, inconvenient nuisance for many.

    “It feels cautiously good right now,” said Dr. Dan Kaul, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Michigan Medical Center in Ann Arbor. “For the first time that I can remember, pretty much since it started, we don’t have any (COVID-19) patients in the ICU.”

    As the nation marks July Fourth, the average number of daily deaths from COVID-19 in the United States is hovering around 360. Last year, during a similar summer lull, it was around 228 in early July. That remains the lowest threshold in U.S. daily deaths since March 2020, when the virus first began its U.S. spread.

    But there were far fewer reported cases at this time last year — fewer than 20,000 a day. Now, it’s about 109,000 — and likely an undercount as home tests aren’t routinely reported.

    Today, in the third year of the pandemic, it’s easy to feel confused by the mixed picture: Repeat infections are increasingly likely, and a sizeable share of those infected will face the lingering symptoms of long COVID-19.

    Yet, the stark danger of death has diminished for many people.

    “And that’s because we’re now at a point that everyone’s immune system has seen either the virus or the vaccine two or three times by now,” said Dr. David Dowdy, an infectious disease epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. “Over time, the body learns not to overreact when it sees this virus.”

    “What we’re seeing is that people are getting less and less ill on average,” Dowdy said.

    As many as 8 out of 10 people in the U.S. have been infected at least once, according to one influential model.

    The death rate for COVID-19 has been a moving target, but recently has fallen to within the range of an average flu season, according to data analyzed by Arizona State University health industry researcher Mara Aspinall.

    At first, some people said coronavirus was no more deadly than the flu, "and for a long period of time, that wasn’t true,” Aspinall said. Back then, people had no immunity. Treatments were experimental. Vaccines didn’t exist.

    Now, Aspinall said, the built-up immunity has driven down the death rate to solidly in the range of a typical flu season. Over the past decade, the death rate for flu was about 5% to 13% of those hospitalized.

    Big differences separate flu from COVID-19: The behavior of the coronavirus continues to surprise health experts and it’s still unclear whether it will settle into a flu-like seasonal pattern.

    Last summer — when vaccinations first became widely available in the U.S. — was followed by the delta surge and then the arrival of omicron, which killed 2,600 Americans a day at its peak last February.

    Experts agree a new variant might arise capable of escaping the population’s built-up immunity. And the fast-spreading omicron subtypes BA.4 and BA.5 might also contribute to a change in the death numbers.

    “We thought we understood it until these new subvariants emerged,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, an infectious disease specialist at the Baylor College of Medicine in Texas.

    It would be wise, he said, to assume that a new variant will come along and hit the nation later this summer.

    “And then another late fall-winter wave,” Hotez said.

    In the next weeks, deaths could edge up in many states, but the U.S. as a whole is likely to see deaths decline slightly, said Nicholas Reich, who aggregates coronavirus projections for the COVID-19 Forecast Hub in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    “We’ve seen COVID hospitalizations increase to around 5,000 new admissions each day from just over 1,000 in early April. But deaths due to COVID have only increased slightly over the same time period,” said Reich, a professor of biostatistics at University of Massachusetts Amherst.

    Unvaccinated people have a six times higher risk of dying from COVID-19 compared with people with at least a primary series of shots, the CDC estimated based on available data from April.

    This summer, consider your own vulnerability and that of those around you, especially in large gatherings since the virus is spreading so rapidly, Dowdy said.

    “There are still people who are very much at risk,” he said.

    ___

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

    Carla K. Johnson, The Associated Press

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    Toronto Public Health hosting pop-up COVID-19 vaccination clinics throughout Canada Day weekend - Toronto.com

    Toronto Public Health continues to host summer pop-up vaccination clinics across the city in partnership with Toronto's Canada Day festivals and special events. This is part of Team Toronto's continued efforts to bring COVID-19 vaccination opportunities to places residents live, work and play.

    “As people gather to celebrate Canada Day across the city, Team Toronto will be out helping residents get vaccinated against COVID-19 and keep their vaccinations up to date," said Mayor John Tory. "We have made such progress thanks to our world-leading vaccination efforts, and that's why we're continuing to work throughout this holiday and into the summer to help deliver vaccine doses.”

    TPH will host the following vaccination clinics in early July:

    • High Park Canada Day Festival at High Park, 1873 Bloor St. W., Friday, July 1, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

    • East York Canada Day Festival at Stan Wadlow Park. 373 Cedarvale Ave., Friday, July 1, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

    • Canada Day event at Mel Lastman Square, 5100 Yonge St. Friday, July 1, 2 to 7 p.m.

    • CIMA Mayor's Cricket Trophy event at Sunnybrook Park, 1132 Leslie St. Saturday, July 2, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

    • Lakeshore Ribfest at 1 Colonel Samuel Smith Park Dr. Saturday July 2 and Sunday, July 3, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

    • Afrofest at Woodbine Park, 1695 Queen St. E. Saturday, July 9 and Sunday, July 10, 1 to 7:30 p.m.

    • Dragon Boat Challenge (GWN Sport Regatta) at Marilyn Bell Park, 1095 Lakeshore Blvd. W. Saturday July 9, 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

    These family-friendly and youth-friendly clinics will provide first, second, third, fourth and children's COVID-19 doses to eligible residents age five and up on a walk-in basis, with no appointment or health card required. Pfizer and Moderna vaccines will be offered by TPH nurses, who will also answer COVID-19 and vaccine-related questions.

    Residents can continue to get vaccinated at city-run immunization clinics, primary care offices and more than 525 pharmacies. A full list of clinic locations and hours is available on the City’s COVID-19: Where to Get Vaccinated webpage.

    As of Monday, July 4, the city-run immunization clinic at Metro Hall will operate Monday to Friday noon to 6 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Residents can find a pharmacy offering COVID-19 vaccination by using the Government of Ontario's COVID-19 pharmacy vaccine locations webpage.

    All eligible residents are encouraged to get their third and fourth dose as soon as possible. As with vaccines for other diseases, people are protected best when they stay up to date. COVID-19 vaccines have been scientifically proven to lower the risk of illness, hospitalization and death while protecting oneself, loved ones and the community, and residents with three doses had the lowest rates of hospitalization, ICU and death over any other level of vaccination.

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    Monkeypox symptoms differ from previous outbreaks, U.K. study says - The Globe and Mail

    FILE - This 2003 electron microscope image made available by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows mature, oval-shaped monkeypox virions, left, and spherical immature virions, right, obtained from a sample of human skin associated with the 2003 prairie dog outbreak.The Associated Press

    Patients with monkeypox in the UK have noticeably different symptoms from those seen in previous outbreaks, according to researchers in London, raising concerns cases are being missed.

    Patients reported less fever and tiredness and more skin lesions in their genital and anal areas than typically seen in monkeypox, the study of 54 patients at London sexual health clinics in May this year found.

    Monkeypox, a usually relatively mild viral illness that is endemic in several countries in western and central Africa, has caused more than 5,000 cases and one death outside those areas – mainly in Europe – since early May. Cases have also risen in the countries where it more usually spreads, according to the World Health Organization.

    The research from London, published in the Lancet Infectious Diseases Journal, follows suggestions from public health bodies like the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that the outbreak - which is spreading chiefly among men who have sex with men – is presenting unusually.

    The authors, from a number of institutions including Chelsea & Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, said case definitions should be reviewed to avoid cases being overlooked, particularly as monkeypox can “mimic” other common sexually transmitted infections (STI) like herpes and syphilis. The study also found that a quarter of the monkeypox patients were HIV positive, and a quarter had another STI.

    “Misdiagnosis of the infection may prevent the opportunity for appropriate intervention and prevention of onward transmission,” said Dr Ruth Byrne, from the trust.

    Monkeypox spreads through close contact, and researchers are working to establish whether it can also be transmitted via semen, the classic definition of sexual transmission. [L1N2Y20QL]

    David Heymann, an infectious diseases epidemiologist and WHO advisor on the outbreak, said it was important to control the spread without stigmatizing those affected.

    “That includes working with populations at the greatest risk to try to help them understand how easy it is to prevent this infection – just by avoiding physical contact in the genital area [when a rash is present],” he told Reuters.

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    Friday, July 1, 2022

    A Logarithmic Map of the Entire Observable Universe - Visual Capitalist

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    Logarithmic map of the Observable Universe

    For a full-size option or to inquire about posters, please visit Pablo Carlos Budassi’s website.

    A Logarithmic Map of the Entire Observable Universe

    Among the scientific community, it’s widely believed that so far humans have only discovered about 5% of the universe.

    Yet, despite knowing about just a fraction of what’s out there, we’ve still managed to discover galaxies billions of light-years away from Earth.

    This graphic by Pablo Carlos Budassi provides a logarithmic map of the entire known universe, using data by researchers at Princeton University and updated as of May 2022.

    How Does the Map Work?

    Before diving in, it’s worth touching on a few key details about the map.

    First off, it’s important to note that the celestial objects shown on this map are not shown to scale. If it was made to scale with sizes relative to how we see them from Earth, nearly all of the objects would be miniscule dots (except the Moon, the Sun, and some nebulae and galaxies).

    Secondly, each object’s distance from the Earth is measured on a logarithmic scale, which increases exponentially, in order to fit in all the data.

    Within our Solar System, the map’s scale spans astronomical units (AU), roughly the distance from the Earth to the Sun. Beyond, it grows to measure millions of parsecs, with each one of those equal to 3.26 light-years, or 206,000 AU.

    Exploring the Map

    The map highlights a number of different celestial objects, including:

    • The Solar System
    • Comets and asteroids
    • Star systems and clusters
    • Nebulae
    • Galaxies, including the Milky Way
    • Galaxy clusters
    • Cosmic microwave background—radiation leftover from the Big Bang

    Featured are some recently discovered objects, such as the most distant known galaxy to date, HD1. Scientists believe this newly-discovered galaxy was formed just ​​330 million years after the Big Bang, or roughly 8.4 billion years before Earth.

    It also highlights some newly deployed spacecraft, including the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which is NASA’s latest infrared telescope, and the Tiangong Space Station, which was made by China and launched in April 2021.

    Why is it called the “Observable” Universe?

    Humanity has been interested in space for thousands of years, and many scientists and researchers have dedicated their lives to furthering our collective knowledge about space and the universe.

    Most people are familiar with Albert Einstein and his theory of relativity, which became a cornerstone of both physics and astronomy. Another well-known scientist was Edwin Hubble, whose findings of galaxies moving away from Earth is considered to be the first observation of the universe expanding.

    But the massive logarithmic map above, and any observations from Earth or probes in space, are limited in nature. The universe is currently dated to be around 13.8 billion years old, and nothing in the universe can travel faster than the speed of light.

    When accounting for the expansion of the universe and observed objects moving away from us, that means that the farthest we can “see” is currently calculated at around 47.7 billion light-years. And since light takes time to travel, much of what we’re observing actually happened many millions of years ago.

    But our understanding of the universe is evolving constantly with new discoveries. What will we discover next?

    green check mark icon

    This article was published as a part of Visual Capitalist's Creator Program, which features data-driven visuals from some of our favorite Creators around the world.

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    The Winnipeg Foundation Innovation Fund supports cutting-edge projects - UM Today

    February 1, 2024 —  Three interdisciplinary teams from the Rady Faculty of Health Sciences have received $100,000 grants from The Winnipeg...