This Weeks Links


Gender Bias in Clinical Trials
Canadian Medical Association

www.cma.ca/cmaj/vol-
159/issue-11/1373.htm

 


Ontario Ministry of Health and Longterm Care


www.gov.on.ca/health/
index.html

 


Ontario Association of Community Care Access Centres

www.oaccac.on.ca/

 

Meet Our Host

Maureen Taylor

As a journalist and broadcaster for 17 years, Maureen Taylor brings a wealth of experience to her on-air roles on TVO.

Schedule

Your Health airs Tuesday evenings at 7:30 p.m. on TVO, and is repeated Wednesdays following the View From Here, between 11 and midnight, and on Sundays at 2:30 pm.

 

 

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Program 22, March 6,

2001

Homecare Crisis

It's more compassionate, not to mention cheaper, to let people die, recuperate or spend their last years living in their own home.  At least, that's the conventional wisdom.

Did anyone anticipate that the shift toward homecare would involve such a reliance on family members?  Have our attempts to provide more care in the home for the sick and the frail, created a new group of burnt-out, financially-strapped caregivers? 

Three million Canadians toil daily behind closed doors, caring for loved ones in their home.  But the homecare system is a patchwork of programs that vary from province to province in quality, access and care.

Over the past six years, Rose Giglio has gradually given up her career, her personal life and her freedom to care for her frail and aged parents.

 


Gender Bias in Drug Testing

Women aren't men with menstrual cycles.  They don't experience every disease the same way men do, so it's important that drugs and therapies be tested on both sexes in clinical trials, and that the results be screened for gender differences. 

But that's not happening, according to Dr. Donna Stewart, Chair of Women's Health at the University Health Network in Toronto and Paula Rochon, a scientist with the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences.


Your Health - Program Archive

2000 - 2001 Season

 
 
 

© TVOntario, 2003

Disclaimer

 
 
This website contains general information on the stories featured on Your Health. Although it’s our goal to provide comprehensive information on health and medical issues, please be advised that we cannot provide individual medical advice on specific health problems.
 

 

Next Week's Your Health
Next Week

March 13 , 2001

Facial Prostheses

Back in the second century in India, there was a guy named Brahmanen whose nose was lopped off in a sword fight.  He replaced it with an artificial one made of painted resin.   The science of making artificial facial features, such as eyes, ears and noses, is called anaplastology, and it's come a long way since Brahmanen's day.  Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre in Toronto employs two of Canada's four anaplastologists who make incredibly life-like prostheses for people who've lost or were born without a facial feature.

Osteoporosis

We're going to talk to a leading expert on osteoporosis, a disease that thins bones, making them more brittle and likely to break.  But don't tune out just because you happen to be a man, or a pre-menopausal woman.  The fact is this disease can affect men too.  And women should be educated about it long before they reach menopause.  An interview with Dr. Robert Josse, director of the Osteoporosis Centre at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto and a past chair of the Osteoporosis Society of Canada.

Joe Schwarcz's Herbs

And Joe Schwarcz looks at Magnesium

 

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