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Canadian researchers reach ‘major milestone' in search for ALS treatment

Canadian researchers reach ‘major milestone' in search for ALS treatment

Toronto Star12-05-2025

TORONTO - Standing in an MRI control room packed with fellow ALS researchers, Dr. Lorne Zinman excitedly points to the brain scan on his phone.
There's a white spot on the image, right where Bill Traynor's motor cortex is. The 70-year-old patient is lying on the MRI bed with his head inside a dome that sends focused ultrasound waves to his head in the experimental trial.

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Canadians still waiting longer for surgeries than before COVID
Canadians still waiting longer for surgeries than before COVID

Vancouver Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Vancouver Sun

Canadians still waiting longer for surgeries than before COVID

The massive surgical backlogs left after rolling pandemic lockdowns are clearing but Canadians are still waiting longer than they were pre-COVID for new hips and knees, cancer surgeries and other 'priority' procedures, new data show. Even though 26 per cent more hip and knee replacements were done in 2024 than 2019, it still wasn't enough to meet the need: just 68 per cent of Canadians received a hip replacement within the 26-week benchmark last year, compared to 75 per cent in 2019. For those needing a knee replacement, 61 per cent got a slot in the operating room within the 182-day threshold, compared with 70 per cent in 2019, even though 21 per cent more knee replacements were performed in 2024 than in 2019. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Median wait times for breast, bladder, colorectal, lung and prostate cancer surgery also rose, with prostate cancer seeing the biggest bump in wait times, an extra nine days over 2019. Wait times for scans to diagnose diseases and injuries also increased, 'with MRI scans requiring an additional 15 days and CTS scans three more days compared with 2019,' the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) reported in a background release. Canadians waited a median 57 days for an MRI scan in 2024. One in 10 waited 198 days. The longer people wait, the more they deteriorate. Delays getting to an operating room 'can lead to disease progression, increased symptoms of anxiety and depression, risk of mental health flareups and worsening of surgical and nonsurgical patient outcomes,' Canadian researchers have warned. Hospitals across the country pushed back non-urgent surgeries during the early waves of COVID to free up beds. Almost 600,000 fewer operations were performed in the first 22 months of the pandemic alone compared to 2019, CIHI reported. The backlog has meant that by the time people see a surgeon, their problem is more complex than it would have been in the past, Dr. James Howard, chief of orthopedic surgery at University Hospital – London Health Sciences Centre said in the news release. Canada's aging baby boomer generation, with arthritis and other joint conditions, is also putting pressure on the system. 'So even with surgeons collectively working as much as they can and completing more surgeries than we have in the past, we are not seeing wait times come down due to the complexity and volume of patients presenting to orthopedic surgeons,' Howard said. 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Ontario and other provinces are trying to push through more surgeries and procedures, partly by doing more on an outpatient basis, meaning no overnight hospital stay. Ontario has also announced plans to expand the number of private clinics providing publicly covered hip and knee replacements. Other provinces have done the same, though 'the impact on surgical volumes and wait times is still being assessed,' CIHI said. According to the agency's latest waitlist snapshot, while the number of hip replacements increased from 22,000 in 2019, to 28,000 in 2024, and the number of knee replacements from 35,000 to 42,000 over the same period, a smaller proportion of people received joint replacement surgery within the recommended six months. Nationally, in 2024, only 68 per cent of people needing a new hip were treated within the 26-week benchmark, compared to 75 per cent in 2019. 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Median wait times for breast cancer surgery increased from 18 days in 2019 to 23 days in 2024, and wait times for bladder cancer increased from 24 days to 28 days. National Post Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here .

Simcoe County walks to raise money for ALS research
Simcoe County walks to raise money for ALS research

CTV News

time4 days ago

  • CTV News

Simcoe County walks to raise money for ALS research

Residents of Simcoe County gathered at the Dorian Parker Centre at Sunnidale Park Saturday morning to raise awareness and money for ALS research. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a disease that progressively paralyzes people because the brain is no longer able to communicate with the muscles of the body. According to the ALS Canada Walk to End ALS website, Simcoe County raised more than $140,000 leading up to the walk. Each walk location had a fun zone station with stickers and craft materials and participants were welcomed to create their own signs for the walk. Proceeds from the walk go towards funding for Canadian ALS research. The walk is recognized in various provinces including Manitoba, Newfoundland & Labrador, Prince Edward Island, and Quebec.

As Ontario pumps millions into private health care, public health will continue to suffer
As Ontario pumps millions into private health care, public health will continue to suffer

Toronto Star

time6 days ago

  • Toronto Star

As Ontario pumps millions into private health care, public health will continue to suffer

Patient: 'How long is the wait?' Family doctor: 'We'll have to see.' The truth? Typical wait times for MRI scans and hip replacements jumped by 30 per cent in Ontario over the decade leading up to 2023. Bad as these trends are, waits are about to get worse. But rather than focus limited resources on the public system, Ontario plans to more than double the funding for private surgical and diagnostic facilities. The new budget will add another $280 million over the next two years to the $275 million already spent on investor-owned facilities. The grand total amounts to well over half-a-billion taxpayer dollars paid into the pockets of private facilities over five years for cataract surgeries, joint replacements, and CT and MRI scans. That leaves half a billion dollars less to make sure that every Ontarian has access to a family doctor. Where does that leave the 1-in-4 Ontarians expected to lose access to primary care by 2026? Yet the funding slated to connect 300,000 people to primary care health teams this year is a relatively paltry $235 million. It's a sum that barely scratches the surface, given that 4.4 million Ontarians won't have a family doctor by next year. The pool of qualified health professionals is limited. A worker hired by a private facility leaves one less available to work in the public system. Consider Alberta — as funding increased for surgeries performed in private facilities, the workforce shifted to for-profit facilities. The Alberta Surgical Initiative was started in 2018-19 and shifted funding toward private, for-profit surgical facilities. As public dollars were pumped into investor-owned facilities, the number of surgeries performed in public hospitals declined and wait times for everyone increased. It also proved far more expensive: The average cost of outsourced procedures rose by 79 per cent since they began contracting private surgical services in 2019, far outstripping inflation. As Alberta's costs swelled, so did public wait times for most priority procedures, including knee replacements and cancer surgeries. The Alberta Surgical Initiative also failed to improve total surgical capacity. Their experience isn't unique. Ontario paid one privately owned facility (Clearpoint Health Network), 2.5 times more than its public hospitals to perform cataract surgeries and 3.1 times more to perform knee arthroscopies. It's impossible for Ontarians to gauge if they're getting value for the money because of Bill 60. Since its passage in May 2023, agreements made between the Ministry of Health and private providers are not disclosed to the public. Bill 60 blindfolds Ontarians from seeing which private facilities provide what services, how many, and at what cost. ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW Governments get ensnared into a vicious cycle of their own making: The longer waits grow, the more pressure builds for them to deliver services. Private facilities seem like a quick fix, but it leaves the public system with fewer health-care workers, which only further exacerbates public wait times. It's a domino effect that's difficult to stop. But stop it must. Longer-term strategies are needed. Ontario's decision to fund primary care teams is a major step in the right direction, but simultaneously funding private facilities will only further erode access to public ones. It's a downward spiral that Ontario continues to actively fund. It's time for Ontario to phase out for-profit staffing agencies altogether and replace them with a publicly funded alternative that ensures the availability of temporary staff when required. This would prevent ER closures and surgical cancellations. Funding public facilities must be prioritized. Half a billion dollars spent on private health facilities leaves half a billion dollars less to pay for public ones. The result? Ontarians wait longer for essential health services — or worse — are denied access to them altogether.

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