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Healthcare

  • Ontario announces five new Ontario Health Teams

    In support of the ongoing fight against COVID-19 and as part of the province's plan to end hallway health care, the Ontario government is announcing five new Ontario Health Teams and is providing additional funding to better connect care. "Over the past several months, Ontario Health Teams have demonstrated remarkable responsiveness to the COVID-19 outbreak by simplifying the purchase of personal protective equipment, supporting the staffing of long-term care homes and assessment centers, and expanding virtual care options," said Christine Elliott, Deputy Premier and Minister of Health, in a press release. "They've done so by breaking down long-standing barriers to better connect care, both in support of patients and our brave frontline heroes. (This) announcement of five new teams will build on this success as we continue to implement our plan to defeat COVID-19."
  • Can the flu shot benefit COVID-19 patients?

    New research out of Brazil suggests that the influenza vaccine may provide benefits for patients who contract COVID-19
  • Reopening schools isn't what's most important right now

    School is not exclusively a positive force in the lives of children, and sending them back before it is safe to do so could do more damage than good
  • Rexall to offer PrescribeIT e-prescribing service nationally

    Rexall Pharmacy Group Ltd. has partnered with Canada Health Infoway (Infoway) to use PrescribeIT, Infoway's national e-prescribing service, at more than 250 Rexall pharmacies across Canada.
  • Less than 1% of Canadians are believed to have contracted SARS-CoV-2

    Canadian Blood Services and Canada's COVID-19 Immunity Working Group have released initial results from the analysis of the first 10,000 samples tested for the presence of antibodies to the disease. However, less than 1% of them contained antibodies.
  • Indoor visits to long-term care homes stymied by rules and enforcement

    Though Ontario has allowed visitors inside long-term care homes for the better part of a week, Mary Oko is still seeing her mother outdoors. Rules enforced during the visits mean there's little benefit to going inside the home, Oko said, and at least this way her mom gets some sunshine.
  • Posting on Quebec's COVID-19 frontline shaped Duvernay-Tardif's decision: agent

    Kansas City Chiefs offensive lineman Laurent Duvernay-Tardif's decision to sit out the 2020 NFL season and focus on medicine wasn't an easy one, but his experience on the front lines of Quebec's COVID-19 fight at a long-term care home shaped that decision, his agent said Saturday. The Canadian offensive lineman announced late Friday through social media he wouldn't take part in the upcoming NFL season, becoming the first player to opt out due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Doctors proudly post their bikini pictures after study suggests it's 'unprofessional'

    The study scanned social media posts of vascular surgeons for 'unprofessional' content, which according to their criteria included posing provocatively in a bathing suit
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