Jade graduated Massage Therapy from Algonquin College in Ottawa and was registered in 2013. When she was 15 Jade knew she wanted to be a Massage Therapist, after participating in a summer career camp. An RMT came and did a talk and demonstration of her work and Jade was hooked. Jade finds fullfillment in her work because she enjoys helping people, providing relief from pain and building long term relationships with clients.

Jade worked for 2 years in a Motor vehicle accident clinic where she regularly treated clients with whiplash and chronic back pain. Some of the conditions she has frequently treated include: whiplash, sciatica, plantar fasciitis, degenerative disc disease, neuropathies, lymphedema, scar work, pregnancy, tendinitis, headaches and more.


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Outside her professional practice, Savy has a variety of interests. She enjoys solitude and meditation, also gardening, walking, playing golf; further theatre and opera, reading, crochet, knitting, and painting. Savy always has time for friends. Her favourite time of day is morning spend with a strong cup of coffee and a nice book.

Huguette graduated from the Canadian College of Massage & Hydrotherapy in 1987. She is amongst a small yet growing handful of massage therapists with an excess of thirty years experience.Chronic pain and tension can be the result of a sports injury, a car accident, postural strain or overall muscle fatigue. The intent of each treatment is to maximize pain and tension relief, improve range of motion and minimize post treatment discomfort.

I graduated with honours from the massage therapy program at Algonquin College in spring 2021. Although I am fairly new to this ever-growing profession, I believe this gives me an advantage in approaching your care with fresh knowledge and an open mind. Together, we will assess your physical needs to determine how massage therapy can best suit you. With the use of several different techniques and modalities, I can aid in decreasing pain, increasing range of motion and calming the nervous system, enabling you to enjoy life with greater ease.

Using a kind heart and skilled hands, Cheryl is passionate about helping her clients reach their specific goals for optimal health. Cheryl is a Registered Massage Therapist with over 11 years of experience. She enjoys discovering and learning different modalities and incorporating them into unique treatments that can address numerous conditions, including chronic body aches, neck pain, migraines, tendonitis, repetitive stress and strain injuries, or to simply maintain muscle and tissue health. She strives to aid her clients on their healing journey by actively listening to their words, their non-verbal language, and what their bodies are telling her through therapeutic touch and assessment. Cheryl offers a space that is welcoming, comfortable, safe, and inclusive to all.

In Couch v Olatiregun, 2023 ABKB 104, the Plaintiff was awarded $4,722.00 in damages for a WAD I injury he suffered in an April 2017 motor vehicle accident. Despite alleging he suffered from chronic pain, the court concluded the Plaintiff was not suffering from chronic pain, he did not suffer a serious impairment, and he had pre-existing medical conditions relevant to his post-accident complaints.

The Appellant/Defendants appealed a damage award for a motor vehicle accident, specifically for loss of future income capacity. The Defendants alleged the Trial Judge erred by finding a future income loss based on a possibility that the ongoing pain suffered by the Plaintiff may prevent him from retiring as planned at 65.

Because self-reports factor heavily into medical assessments for chronic pain, it can be very challenging to distinguish between plaintiffs or applicants that legitimately suffer from chronic pain and those who do not. The plaintiff's or applicant's credibility becomes a central issue in the litigation, and counsel often looks to medical experts for guidance. While it is possible to build a defence based on expert medical opinion, it helps to have additional evidence to tip the balance in favour of a successful defence. Surveillance, when properly gathered, can be an effective tool to impugn a plaintiff's or applicant's credibility and challenge the validity of his or her claim.

Non-pecuniary damages (also called general damages) are awarded to a plaintiff that sustained a non-monetary loss. These damages are not capable of exact quantification. Examples of such losses include, inter alia, pain and suffering.

As the access to and use of marijuana becomes increasingly legitimate and common, it is reasonable to assume that the businesses that operate within this environment will experience significant legal "growing pains". Specifically, the operational risks that companies within the marijuana space face are significant given the limited involvement of regulators, and the attributes commonly associated with consumption. As a result, it is not surprising to see the start of what we believe to be a significant volume of litigation targeting many of the largest players in the industry...

As a result of the accident, Ms. Corbett developed whiplash type symptoms, which evolved into chronic pain syndrome. During trial, Ms. Corbett's evidence was that her chronic pain led to the breakup of her marriage. The jury awarded the plaintiff and her family a total of...

Subjective injuries present a multifaceted problem for defense lawyers. To clarify, subjective injuries refer to instances where a plaintiff makes a claim for chronic pain or a mental illness that is difficult to objectively substantiate through scientific or medical evidence.

This article explores the recent trend of general damages awards in chronic pain cases in Ontario. It breaks down the groundbreaking case of Degennaro, which remains the high watermark in these cases. It then looks to the recent case law to contextualize Degennaro andestablish a framework for understanding how courts arrive at these awards.

Methods: Cop-us and hs-cTnI levels were measured at presentation in 196 consecutive patients admitted to the ED for non-traumatic chest pain with onset within the previous 6 hours and without ST elevation on a 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG). The comparative diagnostic performance for NSTEMI diagnosis of a combination of hs-cTnI and copeptin, hs-CTnI and CK-MB, hs-cTnI and myoglobin on admission; and of the 3 hours hs-cTnI serial sampling was studied with reference to the adjudicated post-discharge diagnosis.

Conclusions: The combined single-sampling use of cop-us and hs-cTnI is non-inferior to dual hs-cTnI sampling to allow a rapid and reliable ruling-out of NSTEMI, and may thus obviate the need for prolonged monitoring and serial blood biomarker sampling in patients within 6 hours from chest pain onset. Diagnostic utility of cop-us results in substantial benefits for both healthcare providers and patients, cutting-down on costs of chest pain management and reducing both self-discharge and readmission rates with important ethico-legal implications.

Acute abdominal pain may be caused by a innumerable of diagnoses, including acute appendicitis, diverticulitis, and cholecystitis. Acute abdominal pain accounts for 5-10% of visits to the emergency department. Rapid and accurate detection of urgent conditions is vital for managing patients and for efficient throughput of patients. Decision making in patients with abdominal pain on the basis of clinical and laboratory evaluation alone can result in unnecessary interventions or in delayed treatment of urgent conditions. Diagnostic imaging plays a key role in the evaluation and management of acute abdominal pain. The use of early CT in patients with abdominal pain has been shown to reduce the number of serious diagnoses missed. CT proved to be cost-effective in the setting of acute appendicitis. CT is the technique of choice for the diagnosis of acute abdominal pain, except in patients clinically suspected of having acute cholecystitis. In these cases, ultrasound (US) is the primary imaging technique of choice. When costs and ionizing radiation exposure are primary concerns, a possible strategy is to perform US as the initial technique in all patients with acute abdominal pain, with CT performed in all cases of non-diagnostic US. Given the low diagnostic yield of the conventional radiography in the evaluation of the acute abdomen, it is difficult to understand its continued application; this examination has only a possible role in the setting of bowel obstruction. However, CT is more accurate in this setting as well. In cases of bowel perforation, CT is the most sensitive technique for depicting free intraperitoneal air and is valuable for determining the cause and the location of the perforation. Imaging is less useful in cases of bowel ischemia, although some CT signs are highly specific. Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is a promising alternative to CT in the evaluation of acute abdominal pain and does not involve the use of ionizing radiation exposure and this is very important in pediatric and young patients and in the pregnant patients.

A no profit, observational, multicentre study was conducted from April to September 2012. We studied 642 foreign patients referring to ED for various symptoms/signs. 114 subjects referred for suspected cardiovascular disease and 105 had a confirmed final diagnosis of cardiovascular disease. More represented Ethnic origin was Caucasian (59%) while most represented country was Romania (24%). Main symptom recorded at ED arrival was chest pain (37.1%). Final Cardiovascular diagnoses were represented by: hypertensive crisis (28.5%), acute coronary syndrome (20%), acute heart failure (12.3%), atrial fibrillation (10.4%), chest pain (10.4%). Past medical history of cardiovascular disease, hypertension, obesity and male sex showed independent significant predictive value for cardiovascular disease diagnosis.

Signs and symptoms. Although heart failure patients are often assumed principally to suffer from fatigue and dyspnea, a majority have pain, and depression is extremely common. Other sources of suffering include edema, insomnia, anxiety, confusion, anorexia, and constipation. The symptom severity number can fluctuate, even within a single day. Cardiogenic shock is characterized by hypotension, tachycardia and third sound (gallop). 589ccfa754

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