Oakville Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 6 Oct 1999, A5

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H O M E F U R N I S H I N G S * 1 Visit our 30,000 sq. ft. newly designed showroom, you will Be amazed at the grea selection. We're bursting with wonderful Fall Savings...Including 15-60% Off all Upholstered floor models!Voted »1 Interior Design 409 BRANT ST. • BURLINGTON • 333-6670 Hours: Monday to Saturday 9:30-5:30 pm Thursday & Friday 9:30-9:00 pm Sunday 12-5 pm h i (olizabetlt oDiilericrs NOW OPEN SUNDAYS 12-5 THE PEACE to Start is TJumULSVUJe a m m a rv , THERE'S A SPACE FOR YOU! PARKING METERS The e lectron ic m eters located on dow ntow n streets accept tw o do lla r co ins as well as quarters and loonies. Parking on Lakeshore Rd. is lim ited to tw o hours at $1.00 per hour. LONG-TERM PARKING Day long parking is available in lots 5, 7, 8 & 1 1 B . In add ition there are long-te rm m eters a long Water, R obinson and Douglas Streets. HANDICAPPED PARKING There are a to ta l o f 18 signed spaces available in lo ts 1 ,2 , 3 , 1 0 , 11a, 15, in the M unic ipa l Parking Garage and at specified street m eters. TH ER E AR E M O R E TH A N 2 ,8 0 0 P A R K IN G S PO TS A V A IL A B L E IN D O W N TO W N O A K V ILLE FREE PARKING is available in all Municipal Lots and at street meters daily after 6:00 p.m., Sundays and holidays. TOWN OF OAKVILLE PARKING OPERATIONS 338-4394 DOWNTOWN OAKVILLE BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT AREA 844-4520 Wednesdsay October 6, 1999 THE OAKVILLE BEAVER Rehabilitation unit focused on improving quality o f life R A M A D A IN N & C O N V E N T I O N CENTRE 360 Oakville Place Drive Please call fbi reservations 845-7561 Sunday, October 10*11 am-2pm Join usfo r our festive brunch including a ll yourfavourites: assorted salads, bacon, sausage, omelettes, waffles, prosciutto, sm oked chicken, salmon, roast turkey w ith a ll the trim m ings, a nd fabulous desserts includ ingpum pkin pie. Coffee, tea & juices included. $ 1 0 9 5 ■ a per person. M i Children under 12 half price • • 'tfinen Sunday, October 10 • 5-9pm 'Table dhote" M enu 1 6 95per person.Children under 12 half price For m ore inform ation call 815-2020 w w w .oakvilletransit.com S t o r ie s b y S a n d r a O m a n d SPECIAL TO THE BEAVER Recovering from a stroke or fractured hip has just gotten easier for residents of Oakville and Milton thanks to a new 39- bed rehabilitation unit at the Oakville- Trafalgar Memorial Hospital. On hand last Thursday to officially open the $2-million facility funded by the provincial government was Elizabeth Witmer, Minister of Health & Long Term Care. "This is really very positive because in talking to some of the patients today there are individuals who were receiving treatment in Hamilton and Toronto who have now been able to be repatriated and come back to their own community," Witmer told a gathering of 80 patients, staff and local dignitaries in the reception area of the new unit. Previously, residents of Oakville and Milton were forced to drive to Toronto or Hamilton to receive rehabilitation thera­ py. This was not only inconvenient, it placed additional stresses on patients and family members. "It is much better for their recovery if people can receive care within their home community," said Mayor Anne Mulvale. With the addition of the new third floor unit, patients go from the acute care stage to in-patient rehabilitation and on to the out-patient stage without ever leaving Oakville. "It is a continuum of care for our patients in our community and it is very supportive of family and the community at large," said Pauline Mihok, Patient Care Manager of the Rehabilitation Unit and Step Up Program. While the need for a rehabilitation facility in Halton has been evident for sometime, it was not until 1998 that sup­ port was received for the program through the Health Services Restructuring Commission. Witmer said funding for the new unit follows the government's objective under the restructuring process to strengthen the health system. "What we've been talking about in the government is bringing the services closer to home and ensuring that the ser­ vices delivered respond to the specific Stroke victim thankful for services It comes without warning and leaves devastation in its wake. It is called a stroke and Jean Caine had one early in June while sitting in an armchair in her southeast Oakville home late one afternoon. Unable to stand or move her left arm, and a with prick­ ly sensation running along the side of her face, she imme­ diately telephoned her family for help. Caine, who will only admit to never seeing 70 again, spent four days in the intensive care unit of the Oakville- Trafalgar Memorial Hospital followed by three months in the rehabilitation unit. "It was a terrible shock because I'm a business woman who went to work every day and to suddenly not be able to do for myself was a terribly traumatic experience," said Caine, owner of CHWO Radio. Two weeks ago she was discharged from the new $2- million provincially-funded 39-bed Rehabilitation program at OTMH that was officially opened last week. Now Caine is an out-patient in the Step Up program that continues on where the in-patient Rehabilitation program left off. Caine said without the Rehabilitation program and the excellent care she received from the rehab staff she would not have gotten better. "I'm up on my feet walking around, when I never thought I would be, and I'm back in my own home, which I never thought I would be," said Caine. She still relies on a wheel chair or a walker much of the time to get around, but insists this is only temporary. Undergoing rehabilitation therapy is something Caine finds "very ironic" since she has devoted her life as a vol­ unteer for rehabilitation services. She and her late husband, Howard, became acquainted with rehab when their daughter, Pamela Caine-Stokes, was confined to a wheel-chair after contracting polio as a young child in 1949. They were active in rehabilitation issues for so many years the March of Dimes honoured them three years ago by naming their building at the comer of Robinson and Trafalgar after the Caines (it is called the Jean & Howard Caine Centre). The apartment building is specially designed so disabled people can live independently. Now Caine has become the unofficial spokesperson for the hospital's new Rehabilitation Unit and is fiercely sup­ portive of the program. "It is important because it is not just for stroke victims or the elderly, but for children or anyone who needs reha­ bilitation to get their limbs functioning again and to get back into the rhythm of their lives," said Caine, who was unable to lift her arm to comb her own hair when she was first admitted. The 39-bed Unit and out-patient Step-Up Program occu­ py the third floor of the hospital known as Three West. Patients stay an average of 28 days in the Rehabilitation Unit which is more home-like than other clinical areas of the hospital. In addition to many common areas, the unit contains a dinning room where patients are encouraged to take their meals and an "Independent Living Center"(ILC) for assess­ ing patient's independence. The ILC, the last stop before discharge, looks like an apartment with its separate kitchen and cozy sitting area. Its purpose is to simulate situations patients would experience at home like getting on and off a sofa, in and out of a regu­ lar bed and preparing a meal on their own in the fully equipped kitchen. "Patients are taught the simplest things in life here because when you lose them they become the most impor­ tant thing," said Patient Care Manager Pauline Mihok. Called "functional independence," patients learn how to wash, dress, void, feed, walk - all activities of daily living that we normally do without thinking - by themselves. This is accomplished through a team approach that encompasses nurses, physicians, physiotherapists, social workers, occupational therapists, speech language patholo­ gists, discharge planners, dietitians, respiration therapists and recreational therapists. 'The beauty of a unit like this is it can be totally coordi­ nated so the people who are working to help you dress are working with the people who are building your strength up etc.", said Caine. Caine's son Michael, who visited his mother up to four times a day, also praised the unit. He was especially impressed with the staff. 'They became like family members. They learned about us and we learned about them and that meant a great deal because that isn't something you get from a union contract or from government funding," said Michael Caine, President & General Manager of CHWO Radio. 'This is something that comes from the heart and we are very blessed in Oakville with the staff because they care." needs of the people in the province," said Witmer. Witmer credited Oakville MPP with being a "strong advocate" for health care funding in his constituency. Afterwards, Carr admitted to being outspoken on heath care issues and push­ ing for funding in this area. "There have been major changes in the health structure right across the province and what I've been doing is working to ensure that during that process we have the funds available to provide the various services for the peo­ ple of Oakville," said Carr. Services for people like Jean Caine who participated in the unusual opening ceremony with Witmer and hospital staff. Rather than have the traditional ribbon cutting ceremony Mihok had participants place a decorated stone representing one of the 14 steps on the road to indepen­ dence in a miniature rock garden to mark the grand opening. Caine, currently an out-patient in the Step Up Program, suffered a stroke three months ago and said she chose to place the stone entitled "dressing" because relearning that skill meant a lot to her. Dr. Greg Thomson, the Medical Program Leader, called the Rehabilitation Program that played such a large role in Caine's recovery "one of the best around" because of its state-of- the-art facilities and the multidisciplinary team running it. ' The team is comprised of nurses, physicians, social workers, physiothera­ pists, occupational therapists, speech lan­ guage pathologists, discharge planners and recreation therapists all working in concert with one another. Another $2 million will be added to next year's base budget to bring the total amount in funding for the new Unit to $4 million. S p ill in t o la k e c o n t i n u e s t o b e in v e s t ig a te d (C o n tin u e d fro m p a g e 1) paint was dumped shortly before the pedestrians on the lakeside walkway first noticed the spill. At its worst, he said, the paint spread out into the lake to form a slick roughly seven yards deep and about 150 yards long. The rocks beneath the sewer outlet were also covered in paint. Unlike sanitary sewers, materials that find their way into storm sewers are not treated, but are sim­ ply discharged into the lake. O A K V ILLE TR A N S IT To connect w ith Your community Click Here / HaltonSearch.com F O R IN F O R M A T IO N C A L L 3 3 7 - 5 5 9 9 Thanksgiving Day Holiday Schedule MONDAY, OCTOBER tl» NO SERVICE http://www.oakvilletransit.com HOME FURNISHINGS* 1 409 BRANT ST. • BURLINGTON • 333-6670 NOW OPEN SUNDAYS 12-5 PARKING METERS LONG-TERM PARKING HANDICAPPED PARKING THERE ARE MORE THAN 2,800 PARKING SPOTS AVAILABLE IN DOWNTOWN OAKVILLE Rehabilitation unit focused on improving quality of life 360 Oakville Place Drive $1095 • • 16 95 Stories by Sandra Omand Stroke victim thankful for services OAKVILLE TRANSIT To connect with Your community Thanksgiving Day Holiday Schedule

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