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Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Public Health providing additional COVID-19 and influenza testing in Dartmouth - Nova Scotia Health Authority

Public Health supports access to COVID-19 and influenza immunization and testing across the province. To help ensure all Nova Scotians have access to these important services, we will be holding an additional COVID-19 and influenza testing clinic this week:

Henry G Bauld Centre
35 Wilfred Jackson Way, Dartmouth
Thursday, Feb. 1 from 11 a.m. - 4 p.m.

The clinic will provide on-site PCR testing for COVID-19 and influenza and/or give out COVID-19 rapid test kits. Drop-ins and booked appointments are welcome. If you’d like to book a testing appointment, visit www.nshealth.ca/coronavirustesting or call 1-833-797-7772. 

All upcoming clinics can be found online at www.nshealth.ca/PHMU

Please note:

  • Vaccines and testing are free and available to all who meet eligibility requirements.
  • Please bring your health card if you have one.
  • Immunization and testing clinics are healthcare environments. Masks are required and will be offered upon entry to the clinic. 
  • Please dress accordingly as you may have to wait in line outside.
  • Clinics may be cancelled due to inclement weather.
  • COVID-19 rapid test kits will also be available at most immunization clinics.

– 30 –

Do you have a COVID-19 symptom? Get tested right away! Early detection is key when it comes to being considered for COVID-19 medication. Please complete the Report and support form when you book a COVID-19 PCR test or have a positive COVID-19 rapid test. 

There are now more ways to access care with YourHealthNS. Download the app or visit YourHealthNS.ca. 

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Public Health providing additional COVID-19 and influenza testing in Dartmouth - Nova Scotia Health Authority
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Tuesday, January 30, 2024

New cyclotron at UBC promises to accelerate cancer diagnostics in B.C. - Tofino-Ucluelet Westerly News

A new cyclotron located at the University of British Columbia promises to improve cancer care in B.C.

Cyclotrons are machines that produce materials, with which doctors detect and monitor cancers and other diseases, and Health Minister Adrian Dix Tuesday (Jan. 30) announced that construction of the machine is underway.

“Having access to medical imaging is critical to (making) a cancer diagnosis,” Dix said in Vancouver. “(This) new cyclotron and laboratory will increase capacity for PET/CT scanners. Increasing PET/CET enables our physicians to accurately diagnose cancers, determine appropriate treatment options, treatment planning and identify appropriate targeted therapies, ensuring all people in B.C. have access to the care they need.”

Four publicly funded PET/CT scanners currently operate in the province — two in Vancouver, as well as one in Victoria and one in Kelowna, with “more coming,” Dix said.

He said about 16,000 PET/CT scans happen annually in B.C. With the new cyclotron, B.C. will have the raw material to do up to 41,000 scans, a “massive, significant” increase, Dix added.

The cyclotron — whose commission is scheduled for 2026, following construction completion in 2025 —is part and parcel of investments totaling $50.5 million, with the provincial government’s share being $32 million.

RELATED: Minister says B.C. making significant progress toward good health

RELATED: Less than 1 in 3 residents say B.C. is handling health care well: survey

Most of that money — $21 million — is going toward the new cyclotron and radio-pharmacy laboratory with the rest going to TRIUMF, Canada’s particle accelerator centre, for research. BC Cancer Foundation is ponying up another $3.5 million to support capital investment and $15 million for critical cancer research.

Dix said the laboratory will also advance research between BC Cancer and TRIUMF at the Institute for Advanced Medical Isotopes.

“This shared facility will help BC Cancer not only rapidly increase the ability to generate radioactive isotopes, but will also help researchers project future demand for them,” he said.

Cyclotrones use a combination of electrical and magnetic fields to accelerate sub-atomic particles to very high energy. Researchers then use the resulting particles in particle physics, nuclear physics and the production of medical isotopes.

Dr. Kim Nguyen Chi, BC Cancer’s executive vice-president and chief medical officer, said these isotopes are key for cancer diagnostics and advanced imaging.

“For patients, this means more precision care and better outcomes,” Chi said.

When asked whether the province has the necessary doctors to treat cancer when detected, Dix said “the short answer is yes.”

It takes many years to train doctors, nurses and other health professionals and previous governments have failed to do that in the past, he said.

That has changed under his government’s health human resources strategy, Dix added. “I think B.C. is one of the most attractive places in the world to practice health care.”

But Dix also acknowledged that more needs to be done in the face of rising demands from an growing and aging population.

”So absolutely, we need to dramatically increase and support medical professionals and health care workers and that’s precisely what we are doing with this announcement today,” he said.


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wolfgang.depner@blackpress.ca

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New cyclotron at UBC promises to accelerate cancer diagnostics in B.C. - Tofino-Ucluelet Westerly News
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New cyclotron at UBC promises to accelerate cancer diagnostics in B.C. - Agassiz Harrison Observer

A new cyclotron located at the University of British Columbia promises to improve cancer care in B.C.

Cyclotrons are machines that produce materials, with which doctors detect and monitor cancers and other diseases, and Health Minister Adrian Dix Tuesday (Jan. 30) announced that construction of the machine is underway.

“Having access to medical imaging is critical to (making) a cancer diagnosis,” Dix said in Vancouver. “(This) new cyclotron and laboratory will increase capacity for PET/CT scanners. Increasing PET/CET enables our physicians to accurately diagnose cancers, determine appropriate treatment options, treatment planning and identify appropriate targeted therapies, ensuring all people in B.C. have access to the care they need.”

Four publicly funded PET/CT scanners currently operate in the province — two in Vancouver, as well as one in Victoria and one in Kelowna, with “more coming,” Dix said.

He said about 16,000 PET/CT scans happen annually in B.C. With the new cyclotron, B.C. will have the raw material to do up to 41,000 scans, a “massive, significant” increase, Dix added.

The cyclotron — whose commission is scheduled for 2026, following construction completion in 2025 —is part and parcel of investments totaling $50.5 million, with the provincial government’s share being $32 million.

RELATED: Minister says B.C. making significant progress toward good health

RELATED: Less than 1 in 3 residents say B.C. is handling health care well: survey

Most of that money — $21 million — is going toward the new cyclotron and radio-pharmacy laboratory with the rest going to TRIUMF, Canada’s particle accelerator centre, for research. BC Cancer Foundation is ponying up another $3.5 million to support capital investment and $15 million for critical cancer research.

Dix said the laboratory will also advance research between BC Cancer and TRIUMF at the Institute for Advanced Medical Isotopes.

“This shared facility will help BC Cancer not only rapidly increase the ability to generate radioactive isotopes, but will also help researchers project future demand for them,” he said.

Cyclotrones use a combination of electrical and magnetic fields to accelerate sub-atomic particles to very high energy. Researchers then use the resulting particles in particle physics, nuclear physics and the production of medical isotopes.

Dr. Kim Nguyen Chi, BC Cancer’s executive vice-president and chief medical officer, said these isotopes are key for cancer diagnostics and advanced imaging.

“For patients, this means more precision care and better outcomes,” Chi said.

When asked whether the province has the necessary doctors to treat cancer when detected, Dix said “the short answer is yes.”

It takes many years to train doctors, nurses and other health professionals and previous governments have failed to do that in the past, he said.

That has changed under his government’s health human resources strategy, Dix added. “I think B.C. is one of the most attractive places in the world to practice health care.”

But Dix also acknowledged that more needs to be done in the face of rising demands from an growing and aging population.

”So absolutely, we need to dramatically increase and support medical professionals and health care workers and that’s precisely what we are doing with this announcement today,” he said.


@wolfgangdepner
wolfgang.depner@blackpress.ca

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New cyclotron at UBC promises to accelerate cancer diagnostics in B.C. - Agassiz Harrison Observer
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Monday, January 29, 2024

U of T study highlights potential protective effects of breastmilk against COVID-19 - Temerty Faculty of Medicine

The COVID-19 pandemic was an especially harrowing time for pregnant people and new parents. The uncertainties about how the new coronavirus could affect a pregnant person and their developing fetus and being suddenly cut off from their support networks left many expecting parents feeling isolated and anxious.

“It was a very surreal time,” says Jenny Doyle, a Toronto mom who gave birth to her first child Elliott in November 2020.

When she became eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine in May 2021, Doyle was proactive in researching the new vaccines and how they might affect both her and her baby. She felt reassured by how safe the vaccine appeared to be in the clinical trials and early roll-out, and by the possibility that its protective effects could be passed on to her baby through breastmilk.

“At the time, vaccines for infants were still so far away. I remember hoping that some of the protection I’d received from my vaccine would pass through to Elliott.”

Now, new findings from a University of Toronto study are providing evidence to support the hopeful idea that Doyle — and countless other new parents — clung to as they waited for vaccines to be made available for their babies.

Led by members of U of T’s Temerty Faculty of Medicine including Deborah O’Connor, who is the Earle W. McHenry Professor and chair of the department of nutritional sciencesSharon Unger, medical director of the Roger Hixon Ontario Human Milk Bank, and Susan Poutanen, microbiologist and infectious disease consultant at Sinai Health, the study looked for antibodies against SARS-CoV-2 in breastmilk from three different cohorts: individuals who contracted COVID-19 while pregnant or nursing, routine milk bank donors and individuals who received two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine while pregnant or nursing.

The researchers detected antibodies in breastmilk from roughly half of the people in the COVID-19 positive cohort but less than 5 per cent of routine milk bank donors, who did not have any known exposures to COVID-19. In the vaccinated cohort, they found that antibodies levels were higher in people who had received the Moderna vaccine compared to those who had received the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Unexpectedly, people who had shorter intervals between their first and second doses had higher antibody levels than those who waited longer between their immunizations.

“That finding definitely surprised me,” says Samantha Ismail, the study’s first author who completed her master’s degree in O’Connor’s lab. “In [blood] serum, it’s the other way around where longer intervals between doses typically result in higher antibody levels, suggesting that something different is happening in this lactating population.”

Ismail and her colleagues took their study one step further by showing that some breastmilk samples could prevent SARS-CoV-2 from infecting cells in a lab setting. Within the COVID-19 positive cohort, milk that contained antibodies against the virus were more likely to be neutralizing, and immunization with the Moderna vaccine was associated with a stronger neutralizing capacity than the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.

The researchers also found a small but significant number of breastmilk samples that prevented SARS-CoV-2 infection despite having undetectable levels of antibodies, suggesting that there could be other components in human milk that are active against SARS-CoV-2.

While these findings provide strong evidence to support the potential protective effects of human milk, Ismail cautions that their study alone is not enough to prove that breastmilk provides tangible protection against COVID-19.

“COVID-19 vaccination and infection result in antibodies in human milk that have neutralizing capacity, but we don’t know for sure how the neutralizing capacity seen in the lab translates to protection in infants,” says Ismail, who is now a second-year medical student at U of T.

She points out that previous studies have shown a clear protective effect of antibodies in human milk against other viruses like enterovirus and rotavirus. To date, such studies have not been done with COVID-19.

Even so, these findings are welcome and reassuring news to parents like Doyle, who breastfed her son longer than she had intended to ensure that he was still getting breastmilk when she received her second COVID-19 vaccine.

“Trying to figure out how to protect this tiny being in that scary and bleak time, I was grasping at every little piece of information and whatever little piece of hope we had.”

This work was a collaboration between the department of microbiology at Sinai Health System/University Health Network, the Roger Hixon Ontario Human Milk Bank at Sinai Health System and the Toronto High Containment Facility, where the live SARS-CoV-2 neutralization studies were done. It includes contributions from several members of the Emerging and Pandemic Infections Consortium including O’Connor, Poutanen, Unger, Scott Gray-OwenJennie JohnstoneAllison McGeer and Samira Mubareka.

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U of T study highlights potential protective effects of breastmilk against COVID-19 - Temerty Faculty of Medicine
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13 research teams receive $8.7M from the Government of Canada and partners to study age-related cognitive impairment - Canada.ca

Research investment successfully delivers on several key milestones of the National Dementia Strategy

January 29, 2024 – Ottawa, Ontario – Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Close to half a million people in Canada aged 65 and older live with dementia. As our population ages, that number is expected to increase. Researching brain health and age-related cognitive impairment will help us develop strategies to prevent dementia, discover new treatments, improve patient outcomes, and raise the quality of life for people affected by dementia, including caregivers.

Today, during Alzheimer’s Awareness Month, the Honourable Mark Holland, Minister of Health, and the Honourable Seamus O’Regan, Minister of Seniors, announced a new research investment of $8.7 million through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), in partnership with the Azrieli Foundation and its Canadian Centre for Caregiving Excellence, to support 13 research teams who are studying ways to reduce the risk of cognitive impairment and dementia in aging.

Through this investment, seven teams are researching risk reduction and care for people with dementia; four teams are studying the short- and long-term health risks for caregivers of people with age-related dementia; one team is investigating the impact of infection and inflammation on brain health; and one team is focusing on Indigenous health research and how to provide culturally appropriate care for those impacted by dementia. These grants will also allow for the training and mentorship of the next generation of dementia researchers in Canada.

The Government of Canada and its partners will continue to invest in research to better understand the causes of dementia, how to prevent it, and how to treat the disease.

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13 research teams receive $8.7M from the Government of Canada and partners to study age-related cognitive impairment - Canada.ca
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'Don't sit on it' warns woman whose husband died of strep A - MSN

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'Don't sit on it' warns woman whose husband died of strep A  MSNView Full Coverage on Google News
'Don't sit on it' warns woman whose husband died of strep A - MSN
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Sunday, January 28, 2024

Chickenpox on the rise in London and Middlesex - CTV News London

The Middlesex-London Health Unit is warning the public that Varicella-zoster virus, also known as chickenpox is on the rise in our community.

MLHU is recommending anyone who has not received their vaccine for chickenpox or have not had the virus talk to their health care provider about the vaccination.

Chickenpox is a virus most commonly affecting young children, but older children and adults who have not had the virus can be affected as well.

Symptoms of chickenpox can include mild fever, itchy rash, and red spots that turn into fluid-filled blisters.

As the virus is easily transmitted, the health unit suggest the chickenpox vaccine is the best way to prevent getting the virus.

Anyone who has had chickenpox is also at risk of shingles as the virus stays in your body for life.

For more information, visit their website

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Chickenpox on the rise in London and Middlesex - CTV News London
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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...