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diseases & conditions

surviving cml makes you ‘grateful for the little things’

eunice orekha was 30 and living in nigeria when she was diagnosed with chronic myeloid leukemia, a rare blood cancer.
dave yasvinski
feb 8 2024

bile duct cancer in canada: stats, survival rate and impact

roughly 16 out of every one million people in canada are diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma – also known as bile duct cancer – each year.
angelica bottaro
feb 8 2024

cml: 'you have to educate yourself so that you can be your own advocate'

joannie clements has seen some important changes in the way doctors communicate with patients since being diagnosed with a rare blood cancer 22 years ago.
dave yasvinski
feb 7 2024

king charles diagnosed with cancer: essential steps and guidance after a cancer diagnosis

if you have recently had your life changed with a cancer diagnosis, knowing the next steps to take in your journey will make it that much easier to navigate.
angelica bottaro
feb 6 2024

opinion: you can't afford to have cancer

thirty-per-cent of canadians would have to go into debt to pay for the out-of-pocket costs of a cancer diagnosis.
andrea seale, ceo, canadian cancer society
feb 6 2024

how i care for congenital heart disease: 'we thought we were going to lose her'

lisa wright says, having been through 18 years of critical care for a daughter with a heart defect, she wants other parents to know how important it is to ask questions.
robin roberts
feb 5 2024

what it feels like: 'you need to advocate for yourself' with congenital heart disease

congenital heart disease occurs when the heart’s chambers, walls or valves, or the blood vessels near the heart don’t develop normally before birth, according to the heart & stroke foundation of canada.
robin roberts
feb 5 2024

what it feels like: one day at a time with congenital heart disease

nathalie lacoste-hofmann considers herself lucky that she didn’t have to wait long for a donor — lucky to get a donor at all — but strange to have another human’s heart beating inside her.
robin roberts
feb 5 2024
powered by
diabetes canada
powered by
canadian centre for caregiving excellence
powered by
canadian society for exercise physiology

surviving cml makes you ‘grateful for the little things’

eunice orekha was 30 and living in nigeria when she was diagnosed with chronic myeloid leukemia, a rare blood cancer.
dave yasvinski
feb 8 2024

bile duct cancer in canada: stats, survival rate and impact

roughly 16 out of every one million people in canada are diagnosed with cholangiocarcinoma – also known as bile duct cancer – each year.
angelica bottaro
feb 8 2024

cml: 'you have to educate yourself so that you can be your own advocate'

joannie clements has seen some important changes in the way doctors communicate with patients since being diagnosed with a rare blood cancer 22 years ago.
dave yasvinski
feb 7 2024

king charles diagnosed with cancer: essential steps and guidance after a cancer diagnosis

if you have recently had your life changed with a cancer diagnosis, knowing the next steps to take in your journey will make it that much easier to navigate.
angelica bottaro
feb 6 2024
powered by
diabetes canada

opinion: you can't afford to have cancer

thirty-per-cent of canadians would have to go into debt to pay for the out-of-pocket costs of a cancer diagnosis.
andrea seale, ceo, canadian cancer society
feb 6 2024

how i care for congenital heart disease: 'we thought we were going to lose her'

lisa wright says, having been through 18 years of critical care for a daughter with a heart defect, she wants other parents to know how important it is to ask questions.
robin roberts
feb 5 2024

what it feels like: 'you need to advocate for yourself' with congenital heart disease

congenital heart disease occurs when the heart’s chambers, walls or valves, or the blood vessels near the heart don’t develop normally before birth, according to the heart & stroke foundation of canada.
robin roberts
feb 5 2024

what it feels like: one day at a time with congenital heart disease

nathalie lacoste-hofmann considers herself lucky that she didn’t have to wait long for a donor — lucky to get a donor at all — but strange to have another human’s heart beating inside her.
robin roberts
feb 5 2024
powered by
canadian centre for caregiving excellence

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