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Oakville Beaver, 27 Sep 2018, p. 53

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53535| O akville B eaver | T hursday,S eptem ber 27,2018 insidehalton.com 1295 Cornwall Road, Unit A1, Oakville L6J 7T5 T: 905-845-4817 www.werkman.caT: 905-845-4817 www.werkman.ca Have You Booked Your Fall Foot & Nail Care Check Up Yet? • Comprehensive foot exam and treatment options • Diabetic footcare • Ulcers, wounds, Total contact casting • Custom-made orthotics for sports and every day • NEW Treatments for Plantar Warts and Fungal Nails • Ingrown nail surgery • Cortisone injections We've moved! See our website for the happy details and call today! • Comprehensive foot exam and treatment options NEW ADDRESS DE RANGO PHARMACY INC 2501 Third Line | 905-465-3000 Open 24 hours | 7 Days a Week DE RANGO PHARMACY INC 478 Dundas Street West | 905-257-9737 Canada Post www.shoppersdrugmart.ca Fabio De Rango Pharmacist/Owner Voted Oakville's Favourite Pharmacist & Pharmacy • Patient Counselling • Complete Diabetic Care • Home Visits • Consultations • Free RX Delivery Thank You to Our Sponsors S IGMA Thank you to everyone who supported this year's Oakville Diwali with their attendance, sponsorship and donations. Together, we raised $257,000 in support of the surgical department at Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital. The Oakville Hospital Foundation has launched a $3 million surgical campaign that will fund more than 75 pieces of surgical equipment and outfit a tenth operating room set to open this year. The equipment will support various surgical specialty areas including vascular, gynaecology, orthopaedic, and ophthalmology. Funds raised at this year's Oakville Diwali means OTMH caregivers can provide your family, friends and neighbours with better patient care and an exemplary patient experience. More than 1 million Canadians are living with frailty, but a lack of consistent measurement of the condition is potentially exposing patients to inappro- priate care, according to a new report by the Nation- al Institute on Ageing (NIA), at Ryerson University's Ted Rogers School of Management in partnership with the Canadian Frailty Network (CFN). The NIA/CFN report "We Can't Address What We Don't Measure Consistently: Building Consensus on Frailty in Canada", authored by Dr. Samir Sinha, Dr. John Muscedere (CFN), Allan McKee, Ivy Wong, Julie Dunning, and Michael Nicin, shows that frailty is a common condition more prevalent in older popula- tions, which increases an individual's risk of falls, emergency department visits, hospitalization, insti- tutionalization, and death. The problem, the authors argue, is that frailty is not being measured consis- tently in Canada, which makes it difficult for health providers and governments to address. "There isn't a single health system, hospital, or home care agency in Canada that is routinely mea- suring frailty when they deliver care and services to older adults," said Dr. Sinha, Director of Geriatrics at Sinai Health System and University Health Network. "That means that health and social care providers may not know whether a treatment, surgery or ser-may not know whether a treatment, surgery or ser-may not know whether a treatment, surgery or ser vice will be beneficial or potentially harmful to their older patients." The lack of consistent measurement is due to disagreement about how best to measure frailty in clinical settings, with some experts contending that there are five core indicators of frailty: grip strength, walking speed, exhaustion, level of physical activity, and unintended weight loss. Others believe frailty is a result of many different factors and it should be measured using an index of deficits, typically made up of 40 to 70 physical, clinical and laboratory mea- surements. "Until the research and medical communities agree on a common measurement of frailty, govern- ments won't be able to address it with public poli- cies," said Michael Nicin, Executive Director of the NIA. "Using scientifically proven tools to identify frailty, proactive models of care and interventions could be put in place to prevent or delay frailty's development or progression. Care planning would also start early rather than waiting for a crisis, improving outcomes and easing the burden and costs to our health and social care systems," said Dr. John Muscedere, Sci- entific Director and CEO of the Canadian Frailty Net- work. This article was provided by the Canadian Frailty Network (CFN), a not-for-profit organization funded by the Government of Canada's Networks of Centres of Excellence (NCE) program. health Consensus needed to measure frailty

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