Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences /newsroom/taxonomy/term/21399/all en Availability of respite care almost triples a palliative care patient’s chance of dying at home /newsroom/channels/news/availability-respite-care-almost-triples-palliative-care-patients-chance-dying-home-367884 <p>Access to respite services for family caregivers increases a palliative care patient’s probability of dying at home almost threefold, according to a Ƭ֦Ƶ-led study.</p> <p>Previous surveys suggest most Canadians with a serious illness would prefer to spend the end of their lives at home. In Quebec, fewer than one-in-10 palliative care patients die at home, a rate that has remained largely unchanged for two decades and lags behind the Canadian average of 15 per cent.</p> Fri, 19 Sep 2025 16:40:19 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 326048 at /newsroom Expert: Suicide prevention  /newsroom/channels/news/expert-suicide-prevention-367471 <p>Sept. 10 is <a href="https://suicideprevention.ca/events/world-suicide-prevention-day/" rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank">World Suicide Prevention Day.</a> A new World Health Organization <a href="https://www.who.int/news/item/02-09-2025-over-a-billion-people-living-with-mental-health-conditions-services-require-urgent-scale-up" rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank">report</a> underscores the urgency of suicide prevention, estimating that 727,000 people died by suicide in 2021 alone.</p> Tue, 09 Sep 2025 14:11:01 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 325946 at /newsroom Biases hinder access to sexual assault evidence kits, study finds /newsroom/channels/news/biases-hinder-access-sexual-assault-evidence-kits-study-finds-367103 <p>Survivors of sexual assault in largely rural and remote Northwestern Ontario face systemic barriers when seeking forensic care, according to a new study led by Ƭ֦Ƶ researchers.</p> Thu, 04 Sep 2025 15:35:56 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 325488 at /newsroom Experts: Ebola outbreak in Democratic Republic of Congo /newsroom/channels/news/experts-ebola-outbreak-democratic-republic-congo-367144 <p>The Democratic Republic of Congo has reported its first Ebola outbreak in three years, which has already claimed 15 lives.</p> <p>Ƭ֦Ƶ experts are available to discuss concerns about the world’s ability to respond quickly, particularly as recent U.S. funding cuts put global health programs under strain.</p> Fri, 05 Sep 2025 15:36:01 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 325611 at /newsroom Expert: Health consequences of wildfire smoke /newsroom/channels/news/expert-health-consequences-wildfire-smoke-366867 <p>Canada’s 2023 wildfire season caused the country’s worst air pollution levels since 1998, according to<a href="https://climate.uchicago.edu/news/climate-driven-wildfires-are-reversing-clean-air-progress/#:~:text=The%20AQLI%20data%20found%20that,billion%20life%2Dyears%20saved%20worldwide."> a new report.</a> It warns that if such pollution levels persist, Canadians could lose about two years of life expectancy.</p> Thu, 28 Aug 2025 16:11:25 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 325084 at /newsroom Study linking depression to specific altered brain cells opens door to new treatments /newsroom/channels/news/study-linking-depression-specific-altered-brain-cells-opens-door-new-treatments-366810 <p>Researchers at Ƭ֦Ƶ and the Douglas Institute have identified two specific types of brain cells that are altered in people with depression.</p> <p><a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-025-02249-4">The study, published in <i>Nature Genetics</i>,</a> opens the door to developing new treatments that target these cells and deepens our understanding of depression, a leading cause of disability worldwide that affects more than 264 million people.</p> Tue, 26 Aug 2025 19:24:20 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 325053 at /newsroom High-salt diet inflames the brain and raises blood pressure, study finds /newsroom/channels/news/high-salt-diet-inflames-brain-and-raises-blood-pressure-study-finds-366452 <p>A new study finds that a high-salt diet triggers brain inflammation that drives up blood pressure.</p> Mon, 18 Aug 2025 19:33:55 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 324740 at /newsroom Experts: GLP-1 drugs beyond weight loss /newsroom/channels/news/experts-glp-1-drugs-beyond-weight-loss-366258 <p>Ozempic and Wegovy are widely used to support weight loss and manage diabetes. But could this class of drugs, known as GLP-1 receptor agonists, also help treat heart failure, liver disease and even addiction?</p> <p><a href="https://www.thelancet.com/journals/eclinm/article/PIIS2589-5370(25)00295-0/fulltext?rss=yes">A new study</a> by researchers at Ƭ֦Ƶ and the Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research at the Jewish General Hospital takes a closer look at their growing list of potential uses beyond diabetes and obesity.</p> Wed, 06 Aug 2025 17:46:33 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 324425 at /newsroom Ƭ֦Ƶ tool helps seniors reduce unnecessary medications /newsroom/channels/news/new-tool-helps-seniors-reduce-unnecessary-medications-366216 <p>Ƭ֦Ƶ researchers have developed and are licensing a digital tool to help safely reduce patients’ use of medications that may be unnecessary or even harmful to them.</p> <p>When clinicians review a patient’s file, <a href="https://www.medsafer.org/">MedSafer</a> flags potentially inappropriate medications. In a <a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40445620/">new clinical trial</a>, the software helped deprescribe such medications in 36 per cent of long-term care residents, nearly triple as many as when reviews were done without the tool.</p> Thu, 31 Jul 2025 17:08:18 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 324370 at /newsroom Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear /newsroom/channels/news/montreal-researchers-use-ai-and-wearable-sensors-detect-inflammation-symptoms-appear-366162 <p>Modern medicine is largely reactive—treating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) and Ƭ֦Ƶ points to a more proactive future: one where silent signs of infection are detected before we even feel sick.</p> Tue, 29 Jul 2025 20:09:42 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 324354 at /newsroom Youth at risk of suicide show early warning signs that adults often miss /newsroom/channels/news/youth-risk-suicide-show-early-warning-signs-adults-often-miss-366080 <p>Drawing on a landmark 25-year study that followed Quebec children into adulthood, Ƭ֦Ƶ researchers have identified two distinct patterns in how suicidal thoughts emerge and the early signs that are often missed.</p> <p>Suicidal thoughts are increasingly common among youth, but how they begin and what mental health symptoms often precede them are poorly understood, the researchers said.</p> Mon, 21 Jul 2025 18:40:04 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 324336 at /newsroom Ancient viruses in our DNA may hold clues to what makes us human /newsroom/channels/news/ancient-viruses-our-dna-may-hold-clues-what-makes-us-human-366069 <p>Fragments of ancient viral DNA once dismissed as “junk” may play a role in controlling our genes, according to a new international study.</p> <p>Using a novel method to trace the evolutionary history of viral DNA, researchers from Ƭ֦Ƶ and Kyoto University uncovered sequences that had been overlooked in earlier genome annotations.</p> Mon, 21 Jul 2025 13:41:55 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 324329 at /newsroom Expert: Obesity  /newsroom/channels/news/expert-obesity-366024 <p>About one-third of Canadians are now obese, with women and young adults most affected, according to<a href="https://www.cmaj.ca/content/197/25/E708" rel="noreferrer noopener" target="_blank"> a new study</a> published in the<em> Canadian Medical Association Journal</em>. It found obesity rates accelerated significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic.  </p> <p>This expert from Ƭ֦Ƶ is available to comment: </p> Mon, 14 Jul 2025 16:39:58 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 324079 at /newsroom Study reveals trained immunity may cause lung damage /newsroom/channels/news/study-reveals-trained-immunity-may-cause-lung-damage-366001 <p>Trained immunity – a process being explored in vaccine and therapy development to boost immune defences –<b> </b>appears be counterproductive in certain contexts, researchers at Ƭ֦Ƶ and the Research Institute of the Ƭ֦Ƶ Health Centre (The Institute) have found.</p> <p>Trained immunity is when the body’s first line of defence remembers past threats and becomes more reactive, responding more strongly to future infections even if they are different, by changing how immune cells behave.</p> Thu, 10 Jul 2025 15:09:15 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 323968 at /newsroom Gender bias holds back female surgeons, study finds /newsroom/channels/news/gender-bias-holds-back-female-surgeons-study-finds-365999 <p>Women now make up over half of medical students in Canada, but only one-third of practising surgeons. A new study suggests part of the gap stems from gender norms embedded in workplace culture. The researchers at Ƭ֦Ƶ say subtle but persistent biases may be driving women out of the field.</p> Thu, 10 Jul 2025 13:52:28 +0000 keila.depape@mcgill.ca 323966 at /newsroom