Category Canada

Non-communicable diseases in the developing world – a hidden pandemic? AboutKidsHealth reports

With the rate of non-communicable diseases in the developing world growing, what can be done to alleviate the problem? AboutKidsHealth, leading online provider of children’s health information, reports on possible solutions.

In the heart of the densely packed streets of Dhaka in Bangladesh lie two of the country’s largest international middle-schools, Heed and Maple Leaf School. Reputed for their high academic standards, the schools are the most popular and populous in the country, despite one obvious peculiarity: each is missing a playground. Read more

Toronto barbershops are helping fathers get involved with their children, reports AboutKidsHealth

Leading online source of children’s health information, AboutKidsHealth, reports on the positive effects of a Toronto-based program seeking to encourage black fathers to get involved in the lives of their children.

Anthony Davis, better known as Peculiar-I, is a “regular” at Toronto’s J.C. Hair Salon & Barbers. “It’s good to be back,” he says, during his most recent visit. “It feels like it’s been too long.” But unlike most, if not all, of the shop’s regular clientele, Peculiar-I never sits down for a trim or a hot shave when he’s back. Instead, he’d rather talk to both patrons and barbers about a subject close to his heart: fatherhood. Read more

How does Oprah Winfrey demonstrate resilience? AboutKidsHealth reports

Can we learn anything about resilience to childhood events from Oprah Winfrey? Leading online Canadian provider of children’s health information, AboutKidsHealth, reports.

After 25 years, Oprah Winfrey has just hosted the last episode of her groundbreaking show. Millions have been inspired not only by her iconic career but also by her tremendous ability to overcome harsh conditions. Despite being raised in poverty under severe physical discipline as a child, and later sexual abuse which led to her giving birth to a stillborn baby at age 14, Oprah had the determination, ambition, and resolve to become one of the world’s most successful women. Her life is the definition of resilience. Read more

Hilbroy Advisory: economy likely to grow by five percent, says IMF

Hilbroy Advisory Reports: Kenya’s economy is likely to grow by 5.4 per cent, says the International Monetary Fund. The IMF on Tuesday said inflationary pressures and insufficient rains, however, present risks that need to be addressed.

“Kenya’s economic reform programme is off to a good start. Economic activity rebounded in 2010, driven by strong agricultural production and a dynamic private sector,” said IMF’s Domenico Fanizza during a press briefing on their mission to Kenya to conduct a review under the extended credit facility. Read more

What do parents go through when their child is in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit? AboutKidsHealth reports

Leading online Canadian provider of children’s health information, AboutKidsHealth, relates the experience of parents whose children are in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, and how things can be made easier for them.

When Shirley Koo’s fragile son, Alain, came into the world at the community hospital of Markham-Stouffville, their lives were immediately thrown upside down. Despite a healthy pregnancy and negative screening test results, Alain was born with Down syndrome complicated by a serious heart abnormality. Within 12 hours, he was transferred to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at The Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) in Toronto. Thus began a journey that would change their lives forever. Read more

AboutKidsHealth investigates the sources and cure for childhood nature deficit disorder

Leading online Canadian provider of children’s health information, AboutKidsHealth, reports on how our kids are not benefitting from enough exposure to nature, and suffering too much from nature deficit disorder.

Thirty-eight-year-old Ken Liao reminisces fondly about growing up in the Philippines. “At 10 I was free to roam and walk to the grocery store,” he says. “I would meet up with some friends along the way and we would go to our school and play in the schoolyard.” Read more

Are educational videos good for kids’ development? AboutKidsHealth reports

AboutKidsHealth, leading online Canadian provider of children’s health information, discusses the potentially negative impact that education videos can have upon kids’ language development.

From a parent’s perspective, educational videos for babies and toddlers are practically a dream product; needing a break perhaps to do chores around the house, parents could plunk baby down in front of the TV thinking it was good for them because it stimulated the learning process. Read more

How can the Microsoft Kinect aid the medical field? AboutKidsHealth.ca reports

Leading online Canadian source for children’s health information, AboutKidsHealth.ca, reports that the Microsoft Kinect is now being used in exciting advancements in methodology for surgical procedures.

Kinect is a type of technology that allows the user to play video games on Xbox 360 without the need for a controller. The Kinect is equipped with a webcam-style add-on which projects infrared beams on everything in its path. This enables the user to control the game using gestures and voice commands. Further, Kinect is able to track the motions of its users. It can tell different users apart based on facial and body characteristics. Kinect is also relatively inexpensive, at $150, and holds the Guiness world record for fastest selling consumer electronics device.

“Essentially, Kinect is skeleton tracking. When it records people’s gestures, it knows the exact location of all their joints. It’s basically low cost, full video motion capture,” says Jamie Tremaine, a mechanical engineer and developer of the technology to use Kinect in health care.

When Kinect was introduced on the market, Tremaine and his colleagues Matt Strickland, a surgical resident and electrical engineer, and Greg Brigley, a hardware developer, saw its potential for use during cancer surgery.

In surgery, there is a need to keep everything sterile around the patient who is being operated on. This is called the ‘sterile field’. However, during cancer surgery, the surgeon also needs to view MRI images of the tumour on a computer, which is not sterile. Traditionally, if the surgeon wants to scan through these images during surgery, he has a couple of choices.

He can halt the surgery, remove his gown and gloves, go to the computer, find the image he needs, scrub and decontaminate himself again like he did when he started the surgery, put on another gown and gloves, and proceed back to the patient to continue the surgery. Alternately, he needs to give very detailed instructions to a colleague to find the image for him. Either choice costs time, a precious commodity when there is a patient on the operating table.

Tremaine, Strickland, and Brigley realized that Kinect technology could be used to make the surgical process a bit easier. They programmed Kinect to allow surgeons to make hands-free gestures that could manipulate the MRI images on the computer screen during surgery.

By removing the need to touch anything on the computer such as the keyboard or mouse, the surgeons can maintain their sterile field and not have to rescrub before going back to the patient. The technology was embraced by Dr. Calvin Law, an oncologist and surgeon at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto, from its conception back in October.

There are many savings involved with this sort of technology. There is the cost of scrubbing, gown, and gloves. There is the time of the doctor and everyone else in the OR with him. There is a savings in terms of the time the patient has to spend anaesthetized on the operating table. And there is a savings in terms of the surgeon’s concentration.

Some may wonder whether Microsoft, the developer of Kinect, had any issues with the use of their technology in this manner. !They are absolutely OK with it. I’m not using any Microsoft software whatsoever. I just use the hardware. It’s kind of like modifying your toaster. I own this cool device so I can do anything I want to it. Beyond that, Microsoft has said they designed the hardware to be open by design. Also, they said they are happy to have applications that aren’t for gaming,” explains Tremaine.

After making a few refinements to their technology, the team is planning to go multisite with the University Health Network.

Sherene Chen-See
Writer/editor
AboutKidsHealth.ca

Please visit AboutKidsHealth.ca for additional education and children’s health resources or for the original article, go to: http://aboutkidshealth.ca/En/News/NewsAndFeatures/Pages/Kinect-in-cancer-surgery.aspx

AboutKidsHealth.ca
AboutKidsHealth.ca is the leading Canadian online source for trusted child health information, and has a scope and scale that is unique in the world. Developed by SickKids Learning Institute in collaboration with over 300 paediatric health specialists, the site provides parents, children, and community health care providers with evidence-based information about everyday parenting information, health and complex medical conditions, from Kinect to teaching science. AboutKidsHealth.ca adheres to rigorous quality standards for the creation and review of health information.

Visit www.aboutkidshealth.ca to find out more.

For more information, please contact:
Sue Mackay, Communications
mailto:susan.mackay@sickkids.ca
The Hospital for Sick Children
555 University Avenue
Toronto, Ontario
M5G 1X8
Canada
Tel: 416-813-5165

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Children taught to think like scientists perform better in science, reports AboutKidsHealth.ca

AboutKidsHealth.ca, leading online Canadian children’s health information provider, reports that a study into children who are taught how to think and act as scientists reveals that the kids develop a greater understanding of science.

The three-year project research project, led by The University of Nottingham and The Open University, has shown that students who took the lead in investigating science topics of interest to them gained an understanding of good scientific practice. Read more

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