- Asthma education
- Autism
- Canadian Health&Care Mall
- Cardiac function
- Critical Care Units
- Follicle
- Health
- health care medical transport
- health care programs
- Health&Care Professionals
- Hemoptysis
- Hormone
- Isoforms
- Nitroglycerin Patches
- Profile of interleukin-10
- Progesterone
- Pulmonary Function
- Sertoli Cells
- Theophylline
- Tracheoesophageal Fistula
Canadian HealthCare News
Canadian Health&Care mall Is in Fight with Autism
Autism can be characterized as a mental development disorder which is manifested in disordered motor and speech activity, superstition of behavior and activity. As a result sufferers become socially isolated. Autism is a neurobiological disorder conditioned by interhemispheric connections. This disorder considers to be a chronic one and appears in the early childhood. Nowadays the scientists cannot be sure speaking about the reasons of this disease because the origin is rather unclear and complicated. It is a fact that an instigator of autism is a genes but the question whether it depends on the amount of genes or other mutations is not answered today.
(more…)Pediatric Medical Transport in the 21st Century Health-Care Landscape Represented by Canadian HealthCare Mall
The article by Ajizian and Nakagawa in this issue of CHEST is a good illustration of the ideal model advocated by the American Academy of Pediatrics regarding pediatric specialty transport. With due regard and respect for the process and empiric principals therein incorporated, we would like to offer alternative consideration and a set of notions taking into account the practical confounders associated with operating a medical transport system in the current Canadian health-care landscape. Medical transport system should be worked out enough to deliver the help in time. The source: canadian health and care mall describes the picture of today's situation.
While the ideal is a laudable goal, its achievement may be impractical. One significant barrier in the model being advocated is the inverse correlation between the high degree of differentiation with adaptability and flexibility within the transport system. Designing a team that is able to deliver great care (as measured by achieving and surpassing identifiable benchmark outcomes) while being a flexible part of the transport system as a whole is another goal worthy of consideration. Extreme differentiation often leads to scarcity of resources. For instance, consider this scenario: a service has one highly trained pediatric specialty team that is the team of preference for all pediatric transports. A transport request is received for the transfer of a child with a “garden-variety” respiratory syncytial virus infection; the team is dispatched and dedicated to that transport, Almost simultaneously, another call is received, this time for a child with epiglottitis in extremis. In this situation, the remaining resources left to care for the sicker child are unprepared and suboptimal.
(more…)Back-to-School: 5 Success Strategies for Gluten-Free Kids
Back to school. Three simple words that strike fear in the hearts of moms universally knowing the mad game of musical chairs required to shift successfully from unstructured summer to the military precision required by the school year routine.
For those gluten-free it can be even more so. Perhaps kids have only learned they need to be gluten-free eaters over the summer. They might be changing schools with new routines and unclear processes lay in wait. Even if gluten-free eating has been something of a norm, I find each new year required connecting with teachers to ensure the classroom situation supports the needs of my ‘GF’ students and with little impact to the teacher.
(more…)Gluten-free scones recipe
What's not to love about a freshly baked scone? This gluten-free version can be made sweet or savoury and makes a dozen.
Ingredients:
3 cups gluten-free self-raising flour
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 cup vegetable oil
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