
Caution about measles advised as Stampede starts
About 1.3 million people are expected through the gates of Stampede over these next 10 days, but some could have measles.

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CBC
3 hours ago
- CBC
WHO pitches health tax on sugar; Dating apps are downsizing: CBC's Marketplace cheat sheet
Social Sharing Miss something this week? Don't panic. CBC's Marketplace rounds up the consumer and health news you need. Want this in your inbox? Get the Marketplace newsletter every Friday. Raise prices on sugary drinks, alcohol and tobacco by 50%, WHO suggests The World Health Organization is pushing countries to raise the prices of sugary drinks, alcohol and tobacco by 50 per cent over the next 10 years through taxation, its strongest backing yet for taxes to help tackle chronic public health problems. The United Nations health agency said the move would help cut consumption of the products, which contribute to diseases like diabetes and some cancers, as well as raising money at a time when development aid is shrinking and public debt rising. "Health taxes are one of the most efficient tools we have," said Jeremy Farrar, WHO assistant-director general of health promotion and disease prevention and control. "It's time to act." WATCH | Shocking amounts of sugar in popular coffee chain drinks: Sugar Shock: Coffee Chains / Buzzkill: Carbonated Drinks 4 years ago Duration 22:30 Shocking amounts of sugar in some popular coffee chain drinks, even ones that seem healthier; lab tests show which sparkling water drinks could harm your launched the push, billed as the " 3 by 35" initiative, at the UN Finance for Development conference in Seville, Spain. WHO said that its tax plan could raise $1 trillion US by 2035, based on evidence from health taxes in countries such as Colombia and South Africa. WHO has backed tobacco taxes and price increases for decades and has called for taxes on alcohol and sugary drinks in recent years. But this is the first time it has suggested a target price increase for all three products. Read more. Is the romance with dating apps over? Big cuts at Bumble, Match raise questions Mass layoffs at dating app provider Bumble are the latest sign that more people are splitting from the high-tech way of making connections. The Texas-based online dating platform disclosed in a securities filing last week that it plans to lay off about one-third of its workforce, amounting to some 240 employees, with an anticipated savings of about $40 million US. Bumble reported a total revenue of about $247 million in its most recent first-quarter earnings, down almost eight per cent from the same period a year ago. "Bumble, like the online dating industry itself, is at an inflection point," Bumble CEO and founder Whitney Wolfe Herd said in a note to employees. The company has been "rebuilding" in recent months, which "requires hard decisions," the note said. A month earlier, Texas-based Match Group — which owns the dating apps Tinder, Hinge and OKCupid — announced plans to cut 13 per cent of its workforce, the company's first big move since CEO Spencer Rascoff took over in February. Read more from CBC's Kevin Maimann. New supply management law won't save the system from Trump, experts say A new law meant to protect supply management might not be enough to shield the system in trade talks with a Trump administration bent on eliminating it, trade experts say. The Bloc Québécois's recently passed Bill C-202 essentially forbids supply management from being used as a bargaining chip in trade negotiations by preventing the foreign affairs minister from making certain commitments. "It's certainly more difficult to strike a deal with the United States now with the passage of this bill that basically forces Canada to negotiate with one hand tied behind its back," said William Pellerin, a trade lawyer and partner at the firm McMillan LLP. "Now that we've removed the digital service tax, dairy and supply management is probably the No. 1 trade irritant that we have with the United States. That remains very much unresolved." When U.S. President Donald Trump briefly paused trade talks with Canada on June 27 over the digital services tax — shortly before Ottawa capitulated by dropping the tax — he zeroed in on Canada's system of supply management. In a social media post, Trump called Canada a "very difficult country to TRADE with, including the fact that they have charged our Farmers as much as 400% Tariffs, for years, on Dairy Products." Canada can charge about 250 per cent tariffs on U.S. dairy imports over a set quota established by the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA). The International Dairy Foods Association, which represents the U.S. dairy industry, said in March that the U.S. has never come close to reaching those quotas, though the association also said that's because of other barriers Canada has erected. Read more. What else is going on? 139-year-old company blames economy and consumers' changing diet habits. Marketplace needs your help! We're working on all-new investigations for our upcoming season and we want to hear from you. Got something you think we should investigate? Email us at marketplace@

CTV News
6 hours ago
- CTV News
Child psychologists say school awards should recognize more than just top marks
Every year, schools across Canada hand out graduation awards to recognize students with top marks. While there may also be awards that celebrate qualities like improvement and leadership, most tend to focus on academic excellence, which child psychologists say can sap motivation and create anxiety. 'Research suggests that focusing on and recognizing only academic achievement can increase anxiety and be demotivating for students – even the high academically achieving students,' clinical child psychologist Dr. Dina Lafoyiannis told from Toronto. Lafoyiannis, who works with parents and clients ages three to 25, says graduation awards would be more motivating and inclusive if they focused on a wider range of achievements and characteristics. 'For example, collaboration, adaptability, growth, communication and leadership,' she explained. 'Recognizing process-oriented achievements, rather than solely outcome-oriented achievements like top marks, sends the message to students that these skills are valued and gives them additional ways to strive for success.' Linda Iwenofu is a clinical child psychologist and assistant professor in applied psychology and human development at the Toronto-based Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. She says decades of research in educational psychology show that students benefit from recognition systems that promote a growth mindset, which highlights the path one takes to success, like hard work and perseverance. 'A narrow focus of awards can lead to decreased motivation, increased stress and a sense of exclusion among students who don't fit the traditional mold of what a successful student is supposed to be,' Iwenofu told 'Such students might then internalize feelings that they are inadequate, which is particularly concerning during middle school, a developmental phase where peer validation is of paramount importance to students.' Iwenofu says traditional graduation awards can also foster unhealthy competition and send the message that only academic excellence matters. Like Lafoyiannis, Iwenofu believes schools need to be recognizing important aspects of a student's development like creativity, social responsibility and overcoming obstacles, which would also help recognize the achievements of students who face barriers like learning disabilities or socioeconomic challenges. 'Studies show that when students are recognized for their effort rather than outcomes, the students show greater resilience and longer-term engagement,' Iwenofu said. 'We should really reimagine graduation awards to honour effort, diversity and holistic growth, especially in middle school.'


CBC
7 hours ago
- CBC
Being my mom's medical proxy was heartbreaking, but I'd do it all over again
This First Person article is the experience of Lynn Paulin, who was born and raised in P.E.I. For more information about CBC's First Person stories, please see the FAQ. On Aug. 22, 2024, I received a text message from my mom. She had decided to go to the emergency room. The back pain she had been dealing with for the past month had become unbearable. I offered to make the 40-minute drive to the hospital to sit with her. She told me not to make the trip over what she suspected was nothing more than a pulled muscle. Not wanting to impose, I respected her wishes and stayed home. I wish I hadn't. Mom walked into the hospital that night thinking it was a minor injury and walked out the next morning with a diagnosis of Stage 4 metastatic lung cancer that had spread to her spine and crushed one of her vertebrae. For an entire month, she had been walking around with a broken back. We barely had time for this news to sink in before phones started ringing from doctors' offices and hospitals informing us of next steps. Attending medical appointments with Mom was not a new occurrence. I had been accompanying her regularly since she was diagnosed with Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF) 18 months earlier. IPF is defined by the Canadian Lung Association as a chronic lung disease that causes irreversible scarring or "fibrosis" of the lung tissue. As the scarring worsens, the lungs stiffen up and breathing becomes more difficult. Prior to her diagnosis, I had never heard of IPF. I spent a lot of time researching the disease, hoping to gain a better understanding of what we were up against. Of all the things I learned, the most intriguing one came directly from Mom herself. Thirty-one years prior, in December 1993, her mom passed from the same disease. The average life expectancy for someone with IPF is three to five years from diagnosis in the absence of a lung transplant. We knew where things were heading for my mom. The cancer just expedited the inevitable. Early September saw us spending more time inside the hospital. The frequency of appointments increased while Mom's stamina and vitality waned. Multiple times a week, I found myself standing with my arms crossed, peppering doctors with questions, mimicking a level of concern I learned from years of watching her do the same for her own children. My brother and I were Mom's whole world. This was reflected in the anxious body language she tried her best to hide whenever something ailed us. She always kept her arms crossed while talking to doctors. It wasn't until I was older that I realized why she did it. She was hiding her shaking hands. Even in her most vulnerable moments, she was being strong for us. Most of us expect to care for our parents at some point. I just didn't expect to do it in my 30s. Not for Mom anyway. My dad has long suffered from a myriad of pre-existing and self-inflicted health conditions. There was always an unspoken awareness that something bad could happen sooner rather than later. It never crossed my mind to think Mom would be sooner. By Sept. 22, 2024, almost two weeks had passed since mom had eaten or drunk more than a couple of sips of a protein shake. She could no longer walk and was asleep more than she was awake. I told her it was time to go to the hospital. She was too weak to protest. I assisted her to the car and, for the first time, really felt the weight of how frail she had become. While waiting to be admitted, Mom said something that instantly made me break into a cold sweat. "There are birds flying around the room. Can you see them?" she asked. I dug through the giant folder of pamphlets and info sheets given to us by her doctor until I found what I was looking for: a medical directive. A medical directive allows the patient to assign someone else to make decisions regarding their care. While we waited for the doctor, we spoke about her wishes. We agreed that Dad's love for her, combined with his predisposition for rash decision-making, may not be the best fit in this situation. We didn't want to add any additional strain on my younger brother, whose first child was due in early December. So, the honour naturally fell to me. I signed the form, knowing it would eventually be relevant, but thinking I had time to prepare. I didn't. On Sept. 25, I received a call from the hospital informing me that my mom was declining and I needed to get there as soon as possible. The same 40-minute drive I opted not to make barely a month prior became the most critical trip of my life. On the way to the hospital, I stopped to pick up my mom's niece for extra support. My brother, his heavily pregnant partner, and my dad arrived soon after. Mom was in a small isolation room transitioning between moments of deep sleep and partial lucidity. She knew who we were and why we were there, but not much else. WATCH | Over 1 million young Canadian caregivers need help, experts say: Over 1 million young Canadian caregivers need help, experts say 18 days ago Duration 2:04 Canada has more than one million young caregivers between the ages of 15 and 30 who are looking after loved ones with long-term health problems, and health-care workers say that without more support, they risk harm to their well-being. I learned that due to Mom's delirium, all decisions about her care would be deferred to me. The doctor asked what kind of life-saving measures should be taken into consideration if her heart stopped or she could no longer breathe independently. The child in me wanted to scream, "That's my mom, do whatever you have to do to save her!" But it's because I was her child that I knew that's not what she would want. I was faced with the most important decision of my life, and the only person whose advice I wanted couldn't help. Ultimately, I decided the treatment should be to keep her comfortable. In the early morning hours of the next day, with just the two of us in the room, the woman who watched me take my first breath took her last. She was 62. She was light, love and selflessness personified. She spent decades going above and beyond for those around her and never asking anything in return. When I was 16, hundreds of dollars and all her spare time for weeks were spent on sewing me a dress from scratch, only for me to break up with my boyfriend two weeks before prom. Instead of being furious when I told her I would no longer need the dress she had worked so hard on, she hugged me and asked if I was OK. That's just who she was. That's why I didn't hesitate to step in when she was the one in need of care. Without my knowing, she had been preparing me for this my whole life. Serving was the blueprint for how she showed unconditional love and understanding. Her influence built the foundation on which I live my life. I wanted to make sure she spent her final weeks enshrouded in the same warmth she so freely gave to others. Though the final chapter of her life's story has ended, her legacy endures as long as I carry the best parts of her within me.