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Political, health leaders among more than 80 new appointees to the Order of Canada

Political, health leaders among more than 80 new appointees to the Order of Canada

CTV Newsa day ago

The Order of Canada medals are displayed during an investiture ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Wednesday, September 23, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
OTTAWA — The prime minister's incoming chief of staff and two doctors who led Canadians through the COVID-19 pandemic are among 83 appointments to the Order of Canada, being announced today by Gov. Gen. Mary Simon.
The list includes Marc-André Blanchard, who takes over in July as Prime Minister Mark Carney's chief of staff. Blanchard previously worked as a lawyer and as Canada's ambassador and permanent representative to the United Nations.
Dr. Theresa Tam, who retired in June as Canada's chief public health officer, will be inducted as an officer of the Order of Canada. Tam became a household name as she led the country's public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Dr. Bonnie Henry, who led British Columbia's pandemic response as the provincial health officer and is heading its public health response to the drug overdose crisis, joins Tam among the new appointees at the officer level.
More than 8,200 people have been appointed to the Order of Canada since its creation in 1967. Many are national household names including politicians, musicians, actors and writers. Many others are awarded for their contributions at a more local level to multiple fields, including science, medicine, education and the arts.
The latest list includes several politicians, including former finance minister John Manley, who is being promoted to the companion level after initially being inducted as an officer of the Order of Canada in 2009.
Companion is the highest level within the order, followed by the officer level, which are both generally awarded for contributions to Canada as a whole, or 'humanity at large.'
A member of the Order of Canada recognizes distinguished service to a specific community or within a specific field.
Maureen McTeer, a lawyer and author who has worked on gender issues and health guidelines, will be appointed as an officer. McTeer, who is married to former prime minister Joe Clark, is currently a visiting professor in the faculty of common law at the University of Ottawa.
Canadian writer Miriam Toews and opinion researcher Bruce Anderson were also named to the Order of Canada.
'We proudly recognize each of these individuals whose dedication and passion for service not only enrich our communities but also help shape the fabric of our nation,' Simon said in a statement released with the list. 'Together, they inspire us to strive for greatness and to foster a future filled with hope and possibility.'
Others appointed to the Order of Canada include biologist Ford Doolittle, musician Gilbert Donald Walsh, former senator Claudette Tardif and poet Louise Bernice Halfe, whose Cree name is Sky Dancer.
Genealogist Stephen White received an honorary appointment.
The governor general is expected to take part in Canada Day celebrations at Lebreton Flats Park on Tuesday, where she will preside over an Order of Canada ceremony, investing five people whose appointments were announced before today.
The inductees being announced today will be invested in ceremonies to be scheduled at a later date.
Catherine Morrison, The Canadian Press

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Bausch + Lomb Combines Patient Voices and New Survey Insights to Combat Persistent Misconceptions about Dry Eye
Bausch + Lomb Combines Patient Voices and New Survey Insights to Combat Persistent Misconceptions about Dry Eye

National Post

timean hour ago

  • National Post

Bausch + Lomb Combines Patient Voices and New Survey Insights to Combat Persistent Misconceptions about Dry Eye

Article content New survey data reinforces the importance of ongoing awareness and education to help dry eye sufferers seek relief sooner Eyes Tell the Story campaign aims to close the awareness gap through personal stories and portraits of those living with dry eye Additional information and dry eye resources available at including opportunity to share your own dry eye story Article content VAUGHAN, Ontario — Bausch + Lomb Corporation (NYSE/TSX: BLCO), a leading global eye health company dedicated to helping people see better to live better, today launched ' Eyes Tell the Story: The Impact of Dry Eye.' The campaign aims to educate about dry eye through personal stories, compelling imagery and new survey data, and encourages people with symptoms to speak with their eye doctor to find relief. Article content Article content Eyes Tell the Story Article content builds upon Article content , an educational campaign launched in 2024 that featured data and insights from the company's first Article content State of Dry Eye Article content survey Article content , which showed the majority of Americans may not know that their eye symptoms are associated with eye dryness, despite the growing prevalence of dry eye. This year's survey, conducted among dry eye sufferers who are using either a prescription treatment or over-the-counter (OTC) product, further supports the need for more patient education and to dispel ongoing misconceptions surrounding dry eye. Key findings include: Article content The majority (78%) of sufferers strongly or somewhat agree they wish they had more resources and education on dry eye Despite most sufferers feeling satisfied in their personal understanding of dry eye, 62% of sufferers mistakenly assume or aren't sure if dry eye resolves itself after some treatment, including 68% of OTC users and 53% of prescription users 43% of sufferers incorrectly thought or weren't sure dry eye was a temporary condition and 42% didn't know or weren't sure it requires long-term treatment Article content The cornerstone of Eyes Tell the Story is a collaboration with photographer and artist Kayte Demont, who has captured portraits of those like her who are living with the daily disruptions of dry eye symptoms. Featured in Kayte's work are Alvin Wayne, an interior designer, lifestyle content creator and men's health advocate whose dry eye symptoms are exacerbated by long working hours, and Brianne Manz, a fashion, lifestyle and parenting blogger, whose symptoms are aggravated by excessive screen time. Kayte, Alvin and Brianne are sharing their stories to help close the awareness gap that exists around dry eye. Article content This year's campaign reinforces that there are a range of potential relief options available that may be appropriate depending on the cause, severity and frequency of dry eye symptoms. Dry eye can affect anyone. If someone is particularly aware of how their eyes feel, it may be a sign of dry eye symptoms, and it's important to consult an eye doctor. Article content 'Approximately 150 million U.S. adults experience occasional or frequent symptoms of dry eye, with around 38 million living with chronic dry eye, also known as dry eye disease,' said Yehia Hashad, MD, executive vice president, Research & Development and chief medical officer, Bausch + Lomb. ' By spotlighting these personal stories, we hope to help more people recognize their dry eye symptoms sooner so they will seek and find relief.' 1,2 The survey also underscores the importance of encouraging proactive dry eye management and for patients to work with their eye doctor to determine the appropriate relief options: Article content 'Don't delay,' said Hashad. 'Relief can come in many forms – from over-the-counter drops and nutritional supplements to prescription treatments from a doctor – but the sooner you seek relief, the better.' Article content To learn more about the Eyes Tell the Story campaign, visit where you can find additional information and dry eye resources. You can also share your own dry eye story via the website, with the potential to be featured in next year's Dry Eye Awareness Month (July) campaign. Article content About Dry Eye Article content Dry eye can be influenced by several factors, including lifestyle, medications, hormonal changes, age, environment and co-morbidities. It may be the result of the eyes not making enough tears or making poor quality tears that evaporate too quickly. The majority of those who progress to dry eye disease also have underlying inflammation. There are a range of options for managing dry eye symptoms, including over-the-counter eye drops, prescription medications and nutritional supplements. Article content About the Survey Article content The research was conducted online in the U.S. by The Harris Poll on behalf of Bausch + Lomb among 732 U.S. adults aged 18 or older considered 'DED sufferers' (defined as those who often/always experience eye dryness or have been diagnosed by a healthcare professional with dry eye disease). Of those 732,347 take only an over-the-counter product to treat their dry eye and 385 take a prescription medication for their dry eye. The survey was conducted between March 24 and April 21, 2025. Article content Data are weighted where necessary by age by gender, race/ethnicity, region, education, marital status, household size, employment, household income and political party affiliation to bring them in line with their actual proportions in the population. Article content Respondents for this survey were selected from among those who have agreed to participate in our surveys. The sampling precision of Harris online polls is measured by using a Bayesian credible interval. For this study, the sample data is accurate to within ±4.8 using a 95% confidence level for total dry eye sufferers, ±6.5 for Rx Users, and ±6.6 for OTC Only users. This credible interval will be wider among subsets of the surveyed population of interest. Article content All sample surveys and polls, whether or not they use probability sampling, are subject to other multiple sources of error which are most often not possible to quantify or estimate, including, but not limited to coverage error, error associated with nonresponse, error associated with question wording and response options, and post-survey weighting and adjustments Article content About Bausch + Lomb Article content Bausch + Lomb is dedicated to protecting and enhancing the gift of sight for millions of people around the world – from birth through every phase of life. Its comprehensive portfolio of approximately 400 products includes contact lenses, lens care products, eye care products, ophthalmic pharmaceuticals, over-the-counter products and ophthalmic surgical devices and instruments. Founded in 1853, Bausch + Lomb has a significant global research and development, manufacturing and commercial footprint with approximately 13,500 employees and a presence in approximately 100 countries. Bausch + Lomb is headquartered in Vaughan, Ontario, with corporate offices in Bridgewater, New Jersey. For more information, visit and connect with us on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, X and YouTube. Article content Article content Article content Article content Contacts Article content Media: Article content Article content Kristy Marks Article content Article content Article content Article content

How Canadian hospitals are trying to break the cycle of readmissions for homeless patients
How Canadian hospitals are trying to break the cycle of readmissions for homeless patients

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

How Canadian hospitals are trying to break the cycle of readmissions for homeless patients

Dr. Stephen Hwang, creator of the Navigator Program and general internal medicine physician, poses for a photograph at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto on Friday, May 9, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette TORONTO — April Aleman tracks the Uber she ordered for her 82-year-old client as it makes its way to a public health building on a quiet street tucked away from the bustle of downtown Toronto. When the vehicle arrives, Aleman unpacks a walker from the trunk and greets the woman with a warm familiarity. She slows her pace to match her client's as they make their way into the clinic and approach the front desk. 'Hello, we have a dentist appointment,' Aleman tells the receptionist while helping the woman rummage through her purse to find a health card. They sit side-by-side on plastic chairs in a near-empty waiting room, leaning towards each other to complete paperwork on a clipboard. 'Do you have an emergency contact you want to put down?' Aleman, a homeless outreach counsellor at St. Michael's Hospital, asks, pen in hand. 'No, just you people,' her client quips, and they both laugh. Aleman works at the Navigator Program, which helps steer unhoused people through a health-care system that can be especially challenging for patients without a fixed address or means to advocate for themselves. The program was established to break the cycle of hospital readmission and improve health outcomes. Aleman's client said she was admitted to St. Mike's with COVID-19 in late December. When it was time for her discharge on Christmas Day, she was homeless for the first time in her life. She said a family member she was living with had kicked her out of the house. The navigators took over her case and found her a shelter bed. 'I hate to even think about it,' she said of what would have happened if Navigator hadn't intervened and she walked out into the bitter cold with nowhere to go. In late January, Aleman helped her secure an apartment in a Toronto Community Housing senior's building. 'Everything I've been been there,' said the woman, whom the hospital asked not to be named to respect the privacy of patient health information. Once their hospital treatment ends, patients without housing are discharged back onto the streets, often without a phone, family doctor, health card or shelter. Many return to hospital with worsened health conditions and the cycle continues. Navigator started at Toronto's St. Michael's Hospital in 2019, and expanded to Vancouver's St. Paul's Hospital in 2023, collectively serving more than 1,000 patients since then. One of the first clients from the Vancouver hospital was a woman who landed in the emergency department about 26 times in two months. 'Then I started working with her,' said Alex MacKinnon, an outreach navigator at St. Paul's. MacKinnon said she helped the patient find housing and saw concrete change, despite the ongoing management of chronic illnesses. 'Having checked back in on her ED rates, they went down significantly,' she said. Dr. Stephen Hwang created the program at St. Mike's after examining readmission rates among homeless patients admitted to internal medicine between November 2017 and 2018. He found that 27 per cent of 129 patients returned within 90 days. Roughly a third of participants were readmitted for an identical diagnosis as their initial admission. It's like having a 'super advocate,' said Hwang. A randomized controlled trial is underway to establish whether the program cuts down on return hospital visits. The trial, funded by a Canadian Institutes of Health Research foundation grant, involves 656 people experiencing homelessness. Hwang said there are already striking indicators that the approach works, such as the fact 67 per cent of Navigator patients who needed a family doctor obtained one through the program. Navigator has three outreach workers at St. Mike's and one at St. Paul's, including Aleman in Toronto and MacKinnon in Vancouver. On average, they each see 15 patients at a time for about 90 days. In Toronto it's funded by St. Michael's Hospital Foundation while the Vancouver pilot is funded by Staples Canada. Navigators bring patients coffee, toothbrushes and fresh socks when they're admitted to hospital. These small acts helps build strong relationships between outreach counsellors and their clients, said Dr. Anita Palepu, an internal medicine physician at St. Paul's. 'It's not just a physical poverty. In some cases, it's also deep social poverty and isolation,' said Palepu. The hope is that after three months patients stand on more stable ground with a roof over their head, a family doctor and government benefits. Though the Navigator office door always stays open. One morning in late May, Fred Ellerington, another Toronto navigator, was alerted that one of his patients was in the emergency department. Right away, one of his colleagues left their shared office on the general internal medicine floor to check on them. 'We're embedded,' Ellerington said of the immediate access hospital-based navigators have to patients and their electronic medical records. Ellerington said the patient had cleared standard health tests but his colleague could tell something was off because the patient's behaviour was odd compared to a visit a week earlier. Ellerington said they encouraged a closer look, suspecting a neurological problem 'They just don't have that relationship with the patient,' Ellerington said. While the program's primary goal is improving health outcomes, Ellerington said cutting return visits can also save money and hospital beds. Hwang said he is working to launch the program at the University of Montreal Hospital Centre later this year and wants to see it in more hospitals across the country. Long-term, he said he wants policies and programs to address the root causes of homelessness, including making housing and mental health supports more affordable. 'But in the meantime, it's just really important that we serve the people who are right before us in our midst, who have urgent, severe health problems, and who end up literally on the doorstep of the hospital.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 1, 2025. Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content. Hannah Alberga, The Canadian Press

What you need to know about Ontario's summer health risks
What you need to know about Ontario's summer health risks

CTV News

timean hour ago

  • CTV News

What you need to know about Ontario's summer health risks

A man kayaks in Lake Ontario on a warm sunny day in Toronto on Friday, August 19, 2016. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette As Ontario enters peak summer season, infectious disease experts are warning that some viruses — from respiratory bugs to mosquito-borne illnesses — thrive in the heat. While many people may consider winter to be the season when they are most at risk of catching a virus and becoming ill, experts who spoke to CTV News Toronto said that there are many infections that actually peak in the summer. Dr. David Fisman, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of Public Health, said that respiratory infections like rhinovirus, enterovirus and para-influenza are all more common in the summer months and are capable of causing mild illness. He also said that other more serious health threats, like measles, can 'come back' when people make a decision to skip vaccination. Ontario reported fewer new measles cases this past week; 33 compared to 96 the week before, officials say the outbreak now stands at 2,212 cases since October. 'If we were having this conversation 100 years ago, we would be talking in a time when in Toronto, summertime was the high mortality season, and most of that mortality was from infectious diseases,' Fisman said, emphasizing that deaths have gone down thanks to smart public health measures. Does climate change play a role? Mosquitoes and ticks are another concern as climate change expands their reach across Canada. Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases specialist at Toronto General Hospital, said Lyme disease is already well established in many parts of Canada. Why Lyme disease is on the rise Dr. Isaac Bogoch explains why Lyme disease is on the rise. 'We do see a fair bit of Lyme in Canada. In 2024 there were roughly 5,000 cases that were identified, but that's likely a gross underestimate. We're probably not detecting the majority of cases. So people should be aware that Lyme is out there,' he said. 'It's very easy to prevent Lyme infections… people can just be mindful where ticks live, typically in tall grass or in forested areas, you can wear insect repellent to reduce the risk of a tick bite, and it's certainly helpful to do tick checks.' To check if ticks or reported Lyme disease has been reported in your area, the Public Health Agency of Canada has created a free online portal where residents can enter their postal code or the first three letters of their city. Travelling this summer? Bogoch also warned that international travellers should prepare for serious infections not found in Canada. 'Mosquito avoidance is key with insect repellent,' he said. 'For infections like malaria, many people should be taking tablets to prevent this infection. It can be very severe and even deadly, and it's important that people are aware that malaria is out there.' 'It's a really good idea to get professional travel advice,' he added. 'There might be infections in other parts of the world that we just don't see in Canada, and these are largely preventable.' Malaria Malaria death rates have been in steady decline since 2000 but rose in 2016 as progress towards eliminating the mosquito-borne preventable disease stalled. (Ales_Utovko / Fisman echoed those warnings, noting that hotter climates accelerate mosquito activity. 'Mosquitoes bite more when it's hotter, their biting rate increases and when you have diseases like dengue or yellow fever or chikungunya… that all gets speeded up and outbreaks can happen,' he said. Hotter weather 'can increase' foodborne illnesses While some people associate summer illness with food poisoning or stomach bugs, Fisman said the risks are 'climate sensitive.' 'There are foodborne illnesses like Campylobacter, Shigella and salmonella… and those are climate sensitive,' he said. 'Hotter weather can increase the risk of foodborne illness, obviously increase the risk of food spoilage and so forth.' He also noted the growing concern around antibiotic resistance, pointing to new Canadian research: 'My colleague Dr. Derek MacFadden, at University of Ottawa, has actually shown that hotter weather is associated with a surge in antibiotic resistance, which people may not realize.' How to stay healthy? Experts say basic hygiene still matters, especially when it comes to respiratory viruses. 'The advice in terms of respiratory infections is the advice for COVID,' said Fisman. 'If you're in a closed, crowded space, you can open a window. You can do activities outdoors if you're concerned. You (should not) show up and infect other people if you're sick.' Bogoch agreed the risks are manageable — if people stay informed. 'Enteroviruses are more common in the summer months, and to no one's surprise, we're starting to see a rise in reported enterovirus cases in Canada,' he said. But he wants to reassure people there is no reason to sound the alarm. 'The key message is, have a wonderful summer. Enjoy. We're going to be okay.'

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