The Public Health Agency of Canada released colour-coded guidance on what people can safely do, once they’re fully vaccinated. The rules say the fully vaccinated can gather indoors with a small group for a dinner party or movie night. Tell us what you think in our news quiz.
Something new has emerged from the depths of healthcare social media that could represent an evolutionary step in networking on Twitter. Twitter Spaces.
Clinic walls used to sag with special shelves and trays full of forms. Cupboard doors refused to close as forms refused to stay inside. Extra forms always slipped out onto counters and floors, when you tried to yank one out from the bottom of a pile.
I was parked in the hospital parking lot, waiting for an MRI of my brain, I do my last minute check for metal objects. No shrapnel, prosthetic valves, pacemakers, just my watch and wedding band. The latter slipped off reluctantly.
Accessibility, quality and convenience are the new cornerstones shaping the post-pandemic healthcare model. Nowhere is this more evident than in the area of specialty medicines.
Quebec FP Dr. Vincent Demers argues that now that the pandemic finally seems to be under control, some media and politicians have resumed their favorite topic which attracts clicks and votes: doctor bashing.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently approved aducanumab, the first treatment that aims to slow the progression of Alzheimer’s disease. But approval of the drug has provoked mixed reactions from the scientific community.