about 50 per cent of people diagnosed with multiple myeloma will survive for at least five years.
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elevating the standard of menopause care: breaking through menopause taboo to talk about symptoms and treatments
discussions about menopause, the biological process where women no longer menstruate and haven’t had a period in 12 consecutive months, shouldn’t be hushed or taboo, experts say.
they belong front and centre as a key part of primary care.
“we need to have a system where every woman, no matter where she lives, can access compassionate, evidence-based support that recognizes menopause as a natural yet significant stage of life, not something that should be dismissed or endured in silence,” says nneka ezurike, pharmacist and pharmacy owner, co-founder of black pharmacy professionals of canada and board member of shoppers foundation for women’s health.
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team-based community care aims to solve family doctor shortage
this is a daunting problem: as many as 6.5 million canadians do not have a family doctor or nurse practitioner they can see regularly.
this lack of access is an increasing burden on emergency care services, chipping away at trust in the healthcare system. in fact, the number of unscheduled emergency room visits jumped from about 14 million in 2021-2022 to almost 15.5 million in 2023-2024, according to data from the canadian institute for health information (cihi).