Rehabilitation

First-of-its-kind study finds prehabilitation for living liver donors can improve recovery after surgery

HN Summary • A UHN feasibility study (PROPELLER) found that prehabilitation (prehab)—exercise, nutrition, and mental health support before surgery—can safely improve recovery for living liver donors.  • Donors who participated felt better prepared and recovered faster, addressing both physical and psychological challenges commonly experienced after donation.  •...

Rebuilding a life after brain injury: The impact of personalized care

HN Summary • After a life-threatening traumatic brain injury, Benjamin Finlan spent four years at St. Michael’s Hospital undergoing complex surgeries and intensive rehabilitation.  • His recovery was driven by highly personalized, team-based care — involving multiple specialties and strong support from his caregiver — focused...

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Motion Analysis Centre helps kids move in the most efficient way

HN Summary • Cutting-Edge Care: Opened in January 2024 at Holland Bloorview, the Motion Analysis...

From trauma to triumph at St. John’s Rehab

After waking up from an induced coma, Johnathan Laporte was met with a life-altering...

Reshaping robotic rehabilitation

For individuals recovering from a stroke or spinal cord injury, restoring hand and arm...

Changing the future of rehabilitation

Aisha Raji overcame a lot in her first few weeks in Canada, from adjusting...

How Toronto Rehab continues to enhance Telerehabilitation at UHN and beyond  

A team of researchers and clinicians at Toronto Rehab has launched the second edition...

Physical rehabilitation seeks solutions in virtual reality

By Ben Maycock When IWK Health’s Dr. Jordan Sheriko was looking for a safe and...

Telerehabilitation is here to stay – are you optimizing your delivery?

Virtual care may have flourished from necessity, but its potential to deliver quality rehabilitation...

A one-two punch in rehabilitation success

By Fred DeVries You might do a double-take when you see Diane Jamieson, 78, donning...

Creating “one door” access to development and rehabilitation

By Dave Scharf Ottawa’s pediatric health and research centre, including a pediatric teaching hospital —...

Minding your heart: Cardiac rehabilitation

At St. Joseph’s Health Care London, the heart-brain connection is top of mind in...

Stroke rehabilitation orientation program: Turning an inspirational idea into reality

By Lila Zitouni and Debbie Gravelle Patients are admitted to the Bruyère Continuing Care (Bruyère)...

Rehabilitation technology helping patients

By Shelly Willsey When Hussain Alhussainy puts on a high-tech exoskeleton during therapy, he feels...

Latest articles

New approach opens door to better-targeted treatments and faster drug discovery for complex diseases

McGill researchers have developed an AI tool called SIDISH that identifies high-risk cancer cells driving aggressive disease, enabling more precise and targeted treatment strategies. By linking single-cell data with patient outcomes, the tool can predict disease progression and simulate responses to potential drug targets, helping accelerate drug discovery and repurposing. While still in development, SIDISH shows promise for advancing personalized cancer care and improving outcomes across multiple tumour types.

Canadian Cancer Society urges lowering colorectal cancer screening age to 45

The Canadian Cancer Society is urging provinces to lower the colorectal cancer screening age from 50 to 45, citing rising rates among younger adults and evidence that earlier screening could prevent over 15,000 cases and 6,100 deaths. Younger patients are more often diagnosed at advanced stages, making early detection critical. Expanding access to simple screening tools like FIT tests could significantly improve outcomes and save lives.

Unleashing natural killer cells against cancer

Researchers at McGill University have developed a new strategy to enhance natural killer (NK) cells, enabling them to better penetrate tumour defenses and destroy cancer cells. Using small-molecule drugs to temporarily boost NK cell activity—rather than permanent genetic modification—the approach showed strong results against multiple hard-to-treat cancers in preclinical studies. The scalable, ready-to-use therapy could make immunotherapy faster, safer, and more accessible, with future clinical trials planned for aggressive cancers like acute myeloid leukemia.

Doctors report false health information, lack of health data sharing put patient care at risk

A new CMA survey reveals major risks to patient care in Canada, with 99% of physicians reporting that disconnected health systems limit access to critical patient information and nearly half witnessing serious adverse outcomes as a result. At the same time, 97% of doctors say they have intervened to address harm caused by false or misleading online health information, including AI-generated advice. The findings highlight the urgent need for integrated digital health systems and stronger efforts to promote reliable health information.