Heart and stroke impact report
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Transcript of Heart and stroke impact report
HSF 15-STEW1-BR-EN
2014 IMPACT REPORT
YOUR GIFTS AT WORK A PROGRESS REPORT ON WHAT WE’RE ACHIEVING TOGETHER
OUR MISSION:
SURVIVORS THROUGHHEART AND STROKE FOUNDATION-FUNDED
RESEARCH AND EDUCATION
CREATE 165,000
SCHOOL CHILDREN TOENGAGE 160,000 PARTICIPATE IN HEALTHY LIVING ACTIVITIES,EAT WELL, AND BE PHYSICALLY ACTIVE
TEACH 450,000 CANADIANS HOW TOTO SAVE A LIFE THROUGH CPR
4 IMPACT REPORT
TOGETHER WE CAN CREATE MORE SURVIVORS
Dr. Sonia Anand McMaster University
Thanks to you, Dr. Anand has found specific differences in how men and women experience a heart attack.
Her team has also tested a useful risk score to predict heart attack risk in women and men from around the globe.
With your support of research like Dr. Anand’s, more men and women can be supported to take steps for reducing their risk and spared from the devastating effects of a heart attack.
PREVENT DISEASE
SAVE LIVES
PROMOTE RECOVERY
THANKS TO YOUR SUPPORT THIS PAST YEAR WE WERE ABLE TO:
WHAT'S INSIDE
Like Grandfather, Like Grandson..................... 2
The Next Big Leap................................................ 3
Helping Kids........................................................... 3
Thanks to Your Support..................................... 4
1-877-882-2582 heartandstroke.ca/yourimpact
/heartandstroke /heartandstrokefdn/thehsf
Dr. Sonia Anand (centre) with her family
Late one night in December 2005, Ray Johnson, 64, was rushed to St. Boniface Hospital in Winnipeg for what turned out to be successful emergency triple-bypass surgery.
While visiting Ray in recovery, his daughter Raelene, who was nine months’ pregnant, went into labour and was admitted to hospital, just one floor above her father.
What began as an amusing coincidence quickly turned into a nightmare when the baby’s heart rate registered off the charts at 200 beats per minute.
Raelene’s unborn child, Atli, was facing his own battle with heart disease. Raelene was rushed in for an emergency C-section and Atli was diagnosed with chaotic atrial tachycardia (an irregular heartbeat).
After doctors stopped and started Atli’s heart several times to try to gain normal rhythm, Atli had to stay in neonatal intensive care for three weeks before he was allowed to go home. He has made tremendous progress since then, and has been medication-free for three years.
Ray, meanwhile, suffered a minor stroke last winter, but thanks to your support got help quickly and is recovering well. Today, he is grateful for every moment he can spend playing ball or going fishing with his grandson.
Creating survivors like Ray and Atli is why we do what we do at the Heart and Stroke Foundation — and with the support of generous donors like you we’ll keep finding ways to prevent these diseases from affecting our children and grandchildren for generations to come.
Dr. Edward Pryzdial University of British Columbia
For the past 12 years, the Foundation has supported the research of Dr. Edward Pryzdial, who is looking for the next revolution in stroke treatment.
Dr. Pryzdial is investigating a promising tPA alternative called Factor Xa (FXa), which can break up clots, reduce the risk of haemorrhage and reduce clot resistance to treatment — all without the harmful side effects of current drugs.
This blood clot-breaking alternative has the potential to give patients safer, faster and more effective treatments. It could be stroke’s next big leap.
Dr. Theresa Green University of Calgary
At the University of Calgary, Dr. Theresa Green is looking for the predictors of marital stressors after one partner has a mild-stroke.
Specifically, she and her team examine mild stroke impairments pertaining to a patient’s behaviour, personality, mood and cognitive changes, and the impacts on spousal relationships.
“Many times, patients with mild stroke were, and still are, discharged very quickly from acute care – often without rehabilitation services or followup from stroke specialists,” says Green.
“We call these patients the ‘Walking Wounded.’ ”
Her goal is to help relationships by providing coping resources, which in turn will also aid in the patient’s physical recovery.
• In a Foundation pilot project for youth, 1,400 children in grades 4-6 in 29 schools across Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan learned about the importance of physical activity, nutrition and remaining smoke-free.
• Implementation of the Sip Smart program in all regions of Quebec sensitized children on the amount of sugar in sugar sweetened beverages and encouraged the consumption of water.
• Students in PEI, and Newfoundland and Labrador learned about healthy lunch and snack choices for back to school.
THE NEXT BIG LEAP FOR STROKE
HELPING KIDS MAKE HEALTHY CHOICES
LIKE GRANDFATHER, LIKE GRANDSONYOUR SUPPORT HELPS CREATE GENERATIONS OF SURVIVORS
“ There have been a lot of advancements in heart treatments thanks to the Heart and Stroke Foundation. Both my grandson and I have benefited from medications and treatments that extend the lives of patients of all ages.” — Ray Johnson, 64
IMPACT REPORT 32 IMPACT REPORT