Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario To Create Clinic To Help People With EDs, Other Rare Diseases

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Feb, 2016 10:31 AM
    TORONTO — Ontario will set up a new clinic to diagnose and treat people with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, or EDS, and it could expand to help patients with other rare diseases.
     
    About one in 5,000 people in the province live with EDS, a genetically-inherited disease that includes a group of connective tissue disorders, and causes acute and chronic pain, joint dislocation and lost vision.
     
    EDS is difficult to diagnose because it affects multiple systems, such as the nervous and/or orthopedic system, skin, joints, blood vessels, and internal organs, and symptoms can vary widely in each patient.
     
    The new clinic will offer more supports for people with EDS by giving their doctors a single point of contact for information on related signs and symptoms, and to get advice from clinical experts on diagnosis and treatment options.
     
    The government says the mandate of the clinic could be expanded to support doctors who are treating people living with other rare diseases, and it will create a working group to look for ways to improve services for them.
     
    Ontario is working with British Columbia and Alberta to develop a national strategy to improve access to pharmaceuticals for rare diseases and address their high costs.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Kamloops Rescuers Received 'Sizable' Donation From Family They Saved

    Kamloops Rescuers Received 'Sizable' Donation From Family They Saved
    Kamloops Search and Rescue manager Alan Hobler will only say the donation is a sizable amount that will cover the cost of the rescue and help purchase a lot of much needed equipment.

    Kamloops Rescuers Received 'Sizable' Donation From Family They Saved

    'Institutional Betrayal' Expert To Speak At UBC Following Alleged Sex Assaults

    When an institution fails a victim after a sexual assault, that betrayal worsens the trauma from the attack, says a leading U.S. expert who is set to speak at the University of British Columbia.

    'Institutional Betrayal' Expert To Speak At UBC Following Alleged Sex Assaults

    Thierry Leroux Identified As Police Officer Killed In Line Of Duty In Quebec

    Thierry Leroux Identified As Police Officer Killed In Line Of Duty In Quebec
     Quebec provincial police have identified the police officer who was fatally shot in the line of duty in Lac-Simon on Saturday night as 26-year-old Thierry Leroux.

    Thierry Leroux Identified As Police Officer Killed In Line Of Duty In Quebec

    Syrians Not The Only Ones Facing Adversity At Home, Say Non-Syrian Refugees

    Syrians Not The Only Ones Facing Adversity At Home, Say Non-Syrian Refugees
    TORONTO — Solomon didn't face a welcoming committee with cameras clicking when he landed in Toronto as a refugee. Instead, he got a send-off.

    Syrians Not The Only Ones Facing Adversity At Home, Say Non-Syrian Refugees

    Woman Arrested For Assaulting Vancouver Police Officer In Downtown Party Bus Fight

    Woman Arrested For Assaulting Vancouver Police Officer In Downtown Party Bus Fight
    VANCOUVER — Five people have been arrested after a fight on a party bus in downtown Vancouver.

    Woman Arrested For Assaulting Vancouver Police Officer In Downtown Party Bus Fight

    4.3 Magnitude Earthquake Rattles Remote Yukon, No Reports Of Damage

    4.3 Magnitude Earthquake Rattles Remote Yukon, No Reports Of Damage
    The quake hit 441 kilometres north of Whitehorse Saturday morning.

    4.3 Magnitude Earthquake Rattles Remote Yukon, No Reports Of Damage