logo
Calling all women: The IWK Foundation wants to hear your health stories

Calling all women: The IWK Foundation wants to hear your health stories

CBC03-07-2025
The IWK Foundation has launched a survey in the hopes of better understanding women's health experiences in the Maritime provinces and to address the disparity in health outcomes between men and women.
The foundation is a not-for-profit organization that raises funds to support IWK Health, a major hospital in Halifax that provides care to women, youth and children from Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island.
Jennifer Gillivan, president and CEO of the foundation, said the online survey invites women ages 18 and up to share their perspectives about their overall health experiences, challenges and outcomes. It also asks questions about their health in different stages of their life.
"Part of our mandate is to educate and advocate for women. And so we realized — we need to hear from women. We need women's voices," said Gillivan in an interview on Thursday.
"I mean, you go out to eat with your girlfriends or your family and you start talking about experiences in health, and they don't stop talking. So we thought this is a phenomenal way to kind of collect all that data and then understand where the pressure points are."
The survey is anonymous. It includes questions like: "What positively or negatively impacts your overall physical health the most?" There is also a full page dedicated to sharing in detail "the good, bad or ugly" of one's health-care story.
The results, which will be reviewed by a team of researchers, will help inform where women need more support and where there are gaps in the system, said Gillivan.
This could include gaps in education and awareness or access to tools and information. But most importantly, it seeks to fundamentally change how women's health is understood, prioritized and delivered in a country where women spend 25 per cent more time in poor health than men, said Gillivan.
"There needs to be a real push on women's research, because research informs care. It changes everything. And we need better training for doctors on women's health," she said.
Gillivan said women's health has been historically under-researched and underfunded, with just seven per cent of total national research funding allocated to it, despite women making up 50 per cent of the population.
She said the findings of the report will inform the IWK's own practices and operations, but will also be shared with anyone else who wants it, including governments, health authorities and other non-profits across Canada.
It will also help guide efforts to educate the wider community that women's bodies are fundamentally different than men's, and their health care needs to be prioritized and researched, she said.
Maggie Archibald is a patient advocate based in Halifax who has struggled with chronic pain for 18 years due to endometriosis that was only officially diagnosed two years ago.
She said she often felt dismissed by the health-care system.
"You symptoms are often not believed and women often have to fight harder to get help," said Archibald. "I'm really excited to see the results and what comes out of this and hopefully we can have some real change."
The foundation expects to share the results publicly on Oct. 1.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Disciplinary hearing for Cape Breton gynecologist wraps up
Disciplinary hearing for Cape Breton gynecologist wraps up

CBC

time9 hours ago

  • CBC

Disciplinary hearing for Cape Breton gynecologist wraps up

The lawyer for a Cape Breton gynecologist has denied all allegations that three women have made against her client. And Muneeza Sheikh went further, saying some of the allegations against Dr. Manivasan Moodley could have been motivated by racism. Moodley is of South Asian descent and moved to Canada from South Africa. Sheikh made her comments as part of closing arguments at a disciplinary hearing before a panel created by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia. The panel wrapped up public hearings on Tuesday in Bedford and is now considering whether Moodley's actions in the three cases constitute professional misconduct. If the panel finds that lawyers for the college have proven their allegations, the next step would be to decide what sanctions he should face. There are three separate complaints by women whose identities are protected by a publication ban. Episiotomy case The first case involved a woman who said Moodley defied her express instructions not to perform an episiotomy during the delivery of her first child. Moodley performed the procedure, which involves making an incision to provide more space for the baby's head during delivery, and the woman gave birth to a healthy child. But she said she was traumatized by the experience and the woman's husband described Moodley's actions as an "assault." Sheikh said using language like that against a racialized person like Moodley was troubling. The woman testified she only wanted an episiotomy if her baby's health was in danger. Sheikh said Moodley's understanding was that he had the woman's consent to perform the procedure and it was not uncommon for women in these situations to not have a complete memory of what was said. Sheikh questioned the woman's claim that she was traumatized, noting she went on to have two more children in fairly close succession. The woman also claimed the experience left her depressed, but Sheikh pointed out she was already being treated for depression before her pregnancy. Tubal ligation The second woman was referred to Moodley by her family physician for a consultation on a tubal ligation, a permanent form of birth control. The woman, 21 at the time, testified Moodley refused to do the procedure because of her age and said her boyfriend or husband should have input on whether she should undergo sterilization. Sheikh disputed the woman's version of the consultation, pointing out Moodley had performed tubal ligations on several women under the age of 25. She also said the woman, seven years after her consultation, still had not undergone the procedure, and her complaint to the college followed media reports of other complaints against Moodley. Sheikh argued that just because the woman was upset did not constitute professional misconduct. Early labour The issue in the case of the third woman was whether Moodley failed to detect that she had gone into early labour. She complained of intermittent lower back pain over a six-hour period and eventually gave birth to a son with serious medical complications. "This was an incredibly unfortunate outcome," Sheikh said in her closing arguments. But she said Moodley did the best he could and met the standard of care. Sheikh denied the college's suggestion that Moodley ignored the possibility the woman was in early labour. The lawyer said even though he didn't write it down, the diagnosis would have been "top of mind" as he monitored her condition that day. Referring to the testimony of the woman's husband, Sheikh described him as an "incredibly angry person who probably felt someone should pay" for his child's difficulties. The panel is not expected to deliver a verdict for several weeks.

Nova Scotia's need-a-family-practice registry hiding full picture, NDP says
Nova Scotia's need-a-family-practice registry hiding full picture, NDP says

CBC

time19 hours ago

  • CBC

Nova Scotia's need-a-family-practice registry hiding full picture, NDP says

The health critic for Nova Scotia's NDP is calling for more data to be released on the province's primary-care provider waitlist. Nova Scotia Health used to release a detailed report showing how many people were added and removed from the list each month, as well as where they were located in the province. Now, the health authority only announces the monthly total. At a meeting at the legislature on Monday, interim CEO Karen Oldfield celebrated the progress they've made in the last year, bringing the list down by nearly half. It now sits at 87,879 Nova Scotians who need a physician or nurse practitioner. "On the one hand, I'm ecstatic because the work that we're doing is working," she said. "On the other hand … we have a lot of work yet to do." When pressed by the NDP's Rod Wilson, Oldfield said that 24,990 names have been added to the waitlist since January. Wilson says they're manipulating the data. A release from the health authority in July said 1,576 people had been attached to a new provider. What it left out was that 5,001 people were added to the list, a number Oldfield revealed in the meeting at the legislature. "We just want the full disclosure," Wilson said after the meeting. "It's not a big ask for people to know how many in my community, what's the government's project plan and when might I get to a primary-care provider?" Part of the reason why the list is going down is the verification process. Nova Scotia Health is calling everyone on the list to make sure they haven't moved away or found a provider on their own. Oldfield said the health authority still has to verify about 27,000 names and she expects that work to be completed in the fall. But she won't commit to releasing more detailed reports at that time. "Once we figure out where we are and what we're looking at going forward, we can make some determinations about what's the right thing for Nova Scotia and for the Department of Health and Wellness." Oldfield said it would be impossible to eliminate the list altogether, because people are always moving and practitioners are always retiring, but her goal is to match people to clinics as much as possible. She said the health authority knows there are people in need of a family doctor who aren't on the list, and is encouraging them to contact 811. "We can't help them if we don't know."

Nova Scotia reports progress with health-care homes model
Nova Scotia reports progress with health-care homes model

CTV News

timea day ago

  • CTV News

Nova Scotia reports progress with health-care homes model

The province of Nova Scotia is changing the model of health care is changing from one patient and one doctor to attaching patients to health-care homes. The face of health care is changing in Nova Scotia and while the province is still dealing with a long list of patients without a family doctor, the model is changing from one patient and one doctor to attaching patients to health-care homes. Nova Scotia Health interim president and CEO Karen Oldfield says while there's still work to do, they are making progress. 'Today's primary health care is delivered by teams that include family physicians, nurse practitioners, nurses, social workers, dietitians, pharmacists, physiotherapists and so many others,' said Oldfield. The province is shifting the way it delivers primary care and has been moving its focus to building team-based clinics or health homes for awhile now. There are currently 118 health homes operating across the province. The Progressive Conservative government, which was elected in August 2021, largely campaigned on a promise to fix health care. Four years later, Oldfield says they are making great progress now, referencing the number of Nova Scotians they've helped connect to primary health care. Last year there were 160,234 people on the need a family practice wait list. That's 16.2 per cent of the province's population. The latest numbers from July show 89,455 people, or 8.3 per cent of the population, are still on the list. 'I'm ecstatic because the work that we are doing is working,' said Oldfield, who credits a range of strategies from recruitment and retention to new technology in helping bring down the wait list. 'It's a little bit technology and it's a whole lot of effort from people across the province.' Nova Scotia legislature The Standing Committee on Health met at the Nova Scotia legislature to discuss primary health care attachment. (Jesse Thomas/CTV News) The provincial introduced the LFM, or Longitudinal Family Medicine, payment model in 2023 for family doctors, which increased their salaries if they take on more patients. Nova Scotia added 253 new doctors last year, which worked out to a 187 net gain, almost double the number of physicians added the year before. There are now 536 family physicians and 126 nurse practitioners working across the 118 health homes. Dr. Colin Newman, president of Nova Scotia's College of Family Physicians, says education is key. 'Increasing medical school enrollment, creating positive learning environments in family medicine and providing high quality community-based family medicine training to our graduates, is the pathway to putting more well trained family doctors in our community,' said Newman. Last year Nova Scotia increased the number of family medicine schools seats from 58 to 114. Karen Oldfield Karen Oldfield is the interim president of Nova Scotia Health. (Source: Jesse Thomas/CTV News Atlantic) For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store