Halton Hills Newspapers

New Tanner (Acton, ON), 15 Feb 2007, p. 8

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8 THE NEW TANNER THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 2006 ?????? ????????????????? ???? ?????????????????????? ??????????????? ????? Margaret and Bob Give generously when the canvasser calls. 12 Main Street North, Acton8 Main St. N. Acton 519-83-9615 Your one stop party store for Party needs, Pre-made Loot Bags, Helium Balloons ??? Dollar Stretcher Daze 8 Main Street North Acton. Tel: 519-853-9615 Serving Acton, Georgetown, Milton, Campbellville, Rockwood, Hillsburg, Glen Williams, Terra Cotta, Erin and Ballinafad. Licensed by the GTAA/ Pearson International Airport. JETLINK Airport Service PICK UP TO/ FROM YOUR DOOR - TO/ FROM TORONTO AIRPORT. CALL TO BOOK. (519) 853-1550 OR TOLL FREE A division of Tyler Transport Ltd. 1-800-73TYLER (1-800-738-9537) 373 Queen Street East, Acton, Ontario L7J 2N2 Tel: 519-853-0051 Fax 519-853-0052 email: thenewtanner@on.aibn.com ??????????????? ???????????? ????????????????????????????????????? ?????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?????????????????????????????? ???????????????? ????????????????? ?????????????? ?????????????? ???????????????? ?????? ??????? Acton Branch 36 Mill Street East Acton, Ontario L7J 1H2 Tel: (519) 853-2420 Fax: (519) 853-4009 www.scotiabank.com Help to advance heart and stroke research. Please give generously. 130 Mill Street East, #103, Acton (519) 853-0079 The Hon. Michael Chong, P.C. M.P. Wellington-Halton Hills chongm@parl.gc.ca 1-866-878-5556 905-702-2597 www.michaelchong.ca Please give generously Heart Month Making a difference Every February during Heart Month, something heart- warming happens tens of thousands of individuals, businesses and community organizations come together to show their support for the Heart and Stroke Founda- tion. In February of 2006, these volunteers, businesses and community organizations came together again to make a remarkable difference. The Foundation has come a long way, thanks to you. History of Heart Month In the early 1950s, the American Heart Association (AHA) introduced a new campaign called Heart Sunday. Heart Sunday, the Sunday closest to Valentines Day, allowed communities to collectively demonstrate their support for the AHA by collecting donations. This idea was slowly adopted in British Columbia in the mid-1950s and then later in Ontario in 1958, and eventually across Canada. The idea of dedicating an entire month to raising funds grew from this campaign and has led us to where we are today, almost 50 years later, with a strong door-to-door campaign during Heart Month. It raises almost $10 million annually in support of research into the root causes of heart disease and stroke. From the 1960s through the early 1990s, door-to-door fundraising was the primary focus of Heart Month. Today, Heart Month is a much larger campaign that spans the area of fundraising, community engagement and awareness generation. Through any one of these activities, Heart Month is a campaign that mobilizes Canadians to rally together in support of the mission. Below see how. Heart disease is leading cause of death in Canadian women February is Heart Month. Many people think of heart disease as a male heath prob- lem. However, heart disease is the leading cause of death in women. Women tend to be safe- guarded from heart disease prior to menopause because of the protective effect of estrogen, but not always. For example, pre-menopausal women with diabetes have similar risk to men of the same age because diabetes cancels out the protective ef- fect that estrogen provides. In the past, it was believed that women had different warning signals than men. This may not be the case. Both women and men may experience typical or non- typical symptoms such as nausea, sweating, pain in the arm, throat, jaw or pain that is unusual. However, women may describe their pain differ- ently than men. Nevertheless, the most common symptom in women is still chest pain. Since heart disease and stroke are Canadas leading cause of death in women and men, its important to understand how to take steps to lessen the chances of these serious illnesses. A great place to start is to learn to identify and control your risk factors. While you cant control your age, family history, gender or ethnicity, there are many other risk factors obe- sity, diabetes, smoking, high blood pressure and elevated blood cholesterol that you can control. In addition, wom- en sometimes may ignore warning signs of heart disease often with devastating re- sults. But the reality is heart disease doesnt discriminate. To protect themselves, it is important for women to recognize all of the warning signals of a heart attack and seek immediate medical at- tention. Signals may be mild or severe and may come and go, so dont take chances seek immediate medical attention. The businesses on these pages support the Heart & Stroke Foundation annual appeal to find a cure for heart disease.

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