
Sponsored Content Honouring Indigenous Children in Hospital
That's why we're supporting the development of the Indigenous Community Healing Space. It is needed for young patients and their families, and is a priority of the HSC Children's reconciliation initiatives.
In Manitoba, Indigenous children are three to five times more likely to be affected by disease and health conditions when compared to non-Indigenous children. It's a grim statistic that points to systemic challenges Indigenous populations face. This is why everyone at the Children's Hospital Foundation of Manitoba, the health care heroes at HSC Children's Hospital and the researchers at the Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba are committed to ReconciliACTION, and improving health outcomes for all kids who need care at Manitoba's only children's hospital.
National Indigenous History month is a time to honour the unique experiences, cultures, achievements and stories of First Nations, Inuit and Métis peoples – like Janessa.
In 2024, Children's Hospital Foundation announced Janessa as the first Champion Child from a Northern remote First Nations community. Janessa's home is in Pukatawagan and her healing journey highlights the challenges children in Manitoba's remote and isolated communities face to get specialized pediatric care.
For kids like Janessa, the 2,000-sq.- ft. Indigenous Community Healing Space will include an area for traditional ceremonies, a library with Indigenous children's books and a place for visiting Elders, healers and Knowledge Keepers to share stories and help comfort kids and their families.
Wednesdays
Sent weekly from the heart of Turtle Island, an exploration of Indigenous voices, perspectives and experiences.
The space is fully Indigenous, led by Dr. Melanie Morris along with Elders, Knowledge Keepers, other Indigenous community members as well as Indigenous leaders in our medical community. When complete, it will provide families with a culturally safe space for healing. Its design will offer a place where children and families can connect with each other and nurture their whole selves – physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually.
In that same spirit, that's why we wanted Indigenous community members to truly see themselves at the Teddy Bears' Picnic.
Last year Picnic started with Indigenous drummers and special messages from Indigenous leaders. Throughout the day, First Nations dancers, Inuit throat singers and Métis fiddlers took centre stage to entertain and educate children and families. On top of this, Indigenous Elders offered teachings all day long inside a teepee, further bridging connections. We hope that the community joins us again for Picnic on September 7 at Assiniboine Park.
To help us continue supporting areas of need like the Indigenous Community Healing Space, please donate at goodbear.ca/indigenoushealth.
Learn more about our Reconciliation efforts at goodbear.ca.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


National Observer
2 days ago
- National Observer
Paying the price for our toxin addiction
'How badly are we messing up? Badly. Can we stop? It's hard: we're addicted to our own toxins. What are the penalties for not stopping? Severe.' So said Margaret Atwood, reflecting on our toxic chemical habits. By mid-summer, the scent of soil is joined by something far more troubling: chemical traces from weed killers, pesticides and other toxins saturating farms, parks and gardens. This raises urgent questions: why are these substances still so widespread, and who is paying the price? The short answer: private sector interests continue to drive chemical use, often at the cost of human and ecological health. From soil to system The impact of these toxic chemicals is made clear in numerous reports documenting dramatic declines in insect populations, as well as the birds and other animals that feed upon them. A recent study of US imperilled species found that while land and sea use change and climate change were the most prevalent threats, pollution was the fourth-most important factor and most species were threatened by a combination of several factors. The combination of toxic pollution, climate change and biodiversity loss (' triple planetary crisis ') has put human health and well-being in danger. Scientists have documented that the Earth is now beyond the safe operating limit to support humanity with six out of nine planetary boundaries exceeded, one of which is 'novel entities' such as pesticides and other toxic chemicals. The commercial determinants of health Business, market and political practices, favourable policy environments and global drivers such as market-driven economies and globalization have contributed to the ill health and injustices associated with hazardous chemicals. Why are pesticides still so widespread, and who is paying the price? write Jane McArthur, Raquel Feroe and Trevor Hancock A greater understanding of the impact of private sector activity on human health originated in the 2010s with the concept of commercial determinants of health. This field, situated within public health, recognizes that commercial strategies, shaped by both political and economic systems, can significantly influence health outcomes, social inequality, climate change and pollution, positively and negatively. The concept of commercial determinants of health shows how corporate strategies — enabled by political and economic systems — can shape health, inequality, climate change and pollution, both positively and negatively. Indigenous peoples and children are particularly affected Indigenous Peoples are directly impacted by pesticide use. For example, glyphosate and other herbicides are widely used in forestry, which disrupts traditional Indigenous harvesting and violates harvesting rights. As such, Indigenous communities have advocated for action by governments on pesticide spraying, but little action has been taken. The federal government's own survey data reveals that Indigenous Peoples in Canada have less confidence that Health Canada is doing a good job of protecting human health and the environment from pesticides, compared with non-Indigenous people in Canada. Indigenous knowledgekeepers and land stewards have asserted that ' pesticides have no place in Indigenous stewardship.' This begs the question to what extent, if any, is there a place for pesticides given the current triple planetary crisis? Unions, such as the United Food and Commercial Workers, have expressed their concern about pesticide overuse, especially as it impacts workers in the agricultural and food processing sectors, who face health consequences. Overuse of dangerous pesticides is linked to a growing reliance on vulnerable labour such as migrant workers, a move that has been criticized by UN Special Rapporteurs. Pesticide exposure is especially harmful to children due to biological and developmental factors. As well, children may face greater exposure to pesticide residue found indoors due to behavioral factors (crawling, mouthing etc.). Adverse health impacts for children exposed to pesticides include altered behaviour, liver cancer, brain tumours, endocrine system impacts and effects on puberty. In light of those concerns, the widespread use of pesticides in the home and garden to kill dandelions or ants is a frivolous and unnecessary practice. Canada can take concrete steps and reverse the status quo As the host country, Canada played a leadership role in negotiating the Global Biodiversity Framework, aiming to halt and reverse biodiversity loss to sustain life on Earth. Under the Framework, Canada agreed in Target 7 to reduce overall risk from pesticides and highly hazardous chemicals by at least half by 2030. However, Canada currently lacks the infrastructure to systematically manage the growing number of chemical products approved for use. To meet its commitments under the Framework, Canada must move beyond pledges and take concrete regulatory and policy action. Health Canada should invest in data collection, safer alternatives, and incentives for industry innovation, while swiftly removing hazardous products containing PFAS, genotoxins, neurotoxins and endocrine disruptors. The Pesticide Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) should raise registration fees, and the federal government must enforce the polluter-pay principle so the costs to public health of our chemical addictions can be mitigated. For the children who play in the dirt, the workers who farm the soil, and the Indigenous communities who maintain a life-giving connection with the land — as well as the rest of us — reducing the development, registration, sale and use of pesticides and other toxic chemicals is necessary. World leaders are not ignorant of this fact. Jane McArthur is toxics program director at the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment (CAPE).


Canada News.Net
2 days ago
- Canada News.Net
Low vaccination drives measles surge in North America, says PAHO
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) noted that measles cases are surging across the Americas, with North America seeing the sharpest rise and 18 deaths recorded so far this year in Mexico, the United States, and Canada. As of August 8, PAHO confirmed 10,139 measles cases across 10 countries in the region, a 34-fold increase compared to the same period in 2024. Of the 18 deaths, 14 were in Mexico, three in the United States, and one in Canada. Many of the fatalities in Mexico were among Indigenous people aged 1 to 54. The agency attributed the outbreaks largely to low vaccination coverage, noting that 71 percent of reported cases occurred in unvaccinated people, while another 18 percent involved individuals whose vaccination status was unknown. "Measles is preventable with two doses of a vaccine, which is proven to be very safe and effective," said Daniel Salas, PAHO's immunization lead. "To stop these outbreaks, countries must urgently strengthen routine immunization and conduct targeted vaccination campaigns in high-risk communities." Measles is one of the most contagious diseases in the world and spreads quickly among unvaccinated populations, especially children. PAHO has urged governments in the region to ramp up immunization efforts to contain the spread. In the United States, vaccination coverage has slipped. A recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study found that rates for measles, diphtheria, and polio declined among kindergartners in the 2024–2025 school year compared to the previous year.


CTV News
2 days ago
- CTV News
Doctors are seeing more non-smokers, especially women, with later-stage lung cancer
Katie Hulan, 37, is one of a growing number of non-smoking women doctors are seeing who have lung cancer. Hulan is seen in an undated handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Mohammed Asaduallah (Mandatory Credit) TORONTO — Katie Hulan's family doctor thought she might have asthma. Her cough, which had started about a month and a half earlier, was getting progressively worse. So he gave her some puffers to try, but they didn't work. 'I was just getting to the point where I couldn't speak at work,' said the 37-year-old tech marketing manager. 'At the end of the day, I would be in pain just from the shaking and coughing.' Her doctor ordered an X-ray that showed a mass on her lung. '(My doctor) said to go to emergency, thinking it was a blood clot,' Hulan remembers. After about six hours of more tests, they told her she had stage 4 lung cancer. 'That was one of the most devastating moments of my life,' she said. 'My immediate reaction was, 'I know how this story ends.' And so for me, it just felt completely like a death sentence.' She had been healthy, active and didn't smoke. 'For me to get a cancer diagnosis was a big shock. And then to have a lung cancer diagnosis was very puzzling for me,' said Hulan, who was diagnosed in Toronto in late 2020 and has since moved to Victoria where she continues treatment. She's one of a growing number of non-smokers doctors are seeing with lung cancer. Although smoking remains the leading risk factor, the Canadian Cancer Society estimates about a quarter of lung cancer cases in the country are non-smokers. In addition, more of those non-smokers are women than men and it's not clear why, said Jessica Moffatt, vice-president of programs and advocacy at the Lung Health Foundation. 'One of the theories is that potentially estrogen is doing something to perpetuate tumour growth, but it's all theories at this point,' she said. What scientists do know is that environmental factors contribute to lung cancer risk, especially radon gas. According to Health Canada, long-term exposure to radon — an invisible, radioactive gas from the breakdown of uranium in soil and rocks — is the number one cause of lung cancer among non-smokers. The agency says radon is present to some degree in every home and urges everyone to get a radon test kit to check their levels. Other risk factors include exposure to second-hand smoke, asbestos and the fine particulate matter in air pollution, Moffatt said. As wildfires rage across the country, the effects of that smoke is 'a huge concern for us' and is an area being studied to determine lung cancer risk, she said. Dr. Rosalyn Juergens, a medical oncologist at McMaster University and Hamilton Health Sciences Centre, said studies have shown that people living in areas with high air pollution rates have a higher risk of developing lung cancer. Over about 20 years in practice, she has 'absolutely' seen a rise in non-smoking lung cancer patients. 'It was uncommon for me, not never, but uncommon for me, to see a never-smoker when I first started in practice. And we are definitely seeing more and more,' said Juergens, who is also the president of Lung Cancer Canada. It's not clear whether there are more non-smokers getting lung cancer or if they just make up a greater proportion of the patients as fewer people smoke than ever before, she said. Many of her non-smoking patients are women, but people simply aren't aware of lung cancer as a women's health issue, she said. When non-smokers reach her office, their cancer is often in advanced stages. 'More women will die of lung cancer than will die of breast cancer, ovarian cancer, and cervical cancer combined,' Juergens said. 'One in five of them will be people who have never touched a cigarette a day in their lives.' Although organized lung cancer screening programs have been running in British Columbia, Ontario and Nova Scotia since 2022, they only target smokers, so non-smokers don't get the benefit of that early detection. In addition, lung cancer is often not top-of-mind for primary-care providers when non-smoking patients come in with a cough, Juergens said. 'The tricky part about lung cancer is symptoms are generally very subtle, right? Your lungs inside don't have nerve endings. So it's not like you're going to get a pain. You're never going to feel a lump,' she said. But the good news for many patients, Juergens said, is that lung cancer treatment has advanced dramatically since the 1990s, when chemotherapy was often the only option. 'We do things called next generation sequencing on the vast majority of lung cancers, and that helps us to sort what exact type of lung cancer it is and pick the right treatments,' she said. That precision medicine turned Katie Hulan's initial life expectancy of six months into an average of five to six years. A biopsy showed that her cancer had an ALK genetic mutation — one of about a dozen biomarkers that have specific medications to target the cancerous cells, and is only present in about four per cent of cases. 'When I got that news, it felt like a 180. I had life. I had hope. You know, my oncologist sat down and said, 'you won the lottery, you have years,'' she said. Almost five years after her diagnosis, Hulan continues to take a pill as her treatment, never had to undergo chemotherapy, feels 'wonderful' and is determined to live a long, full life. She now does advocacy work for the Lung Health Foundation to call for equal access to targeted cancer medication across the country and to urge people to seek medical attention if they have a cough that lasts more than two or three weeks. 'I think the word on the street is that you have to be a person who has smoked and that's not at all the case,' she said. 'Anyone with lungs can get lung cancer.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 18, 2025. Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content. Nicole Ireland, The Canadian Press