MAID laws have created moral dilemmas for many nurses, a new study says, with many expressing concern over vulnerable patients
Category: PressReader
Londoners ‘speed date’ for the ideal housemate
‘You have people in their 30s and 40s in house shares. I don’t really think it’s a situation people particularly want to be in’
Meth found in sweets handed out by New Zealand charity
Pineapple sweets dished out by a New Zealand charity have tested positive for potentially lethal amounts of methamphetamine
U of T protesters’ unresolved demands pave way for eventful fall
The pro-Palestine protests at the University of Toronto ended abruptly in July. Protestors are returning this fall with rights—and demands
Canada’s ‘age-friendly’ universities prioritize senior students
Numerous Canadian universities have pledged to become age-friendly. They’re encouraging seniors to become students and promoting healthy aging
‘Difficult to digest’: Jasper loses two of its five churches in wildfires
Jasper’s church leaders reflect on their sense of devastation and loss in the wake of the wildfires — and on what gives them hope
Editorial: Ottawa creates ‘two-tier’ child care with misguided policies
Ottawa’s aversion to child care being delivered by for-profit centres suggests deep confusion about the policy issues at play—and the government’s role
‘Scared about smiling’: Suboxone’s dental risks spur class-action lawsuit
Suboxone is widely prescribed to treat opioid use disorder. Suboxone users are claiming the drug’s producers failed to warn them of the risks
Kinship caregivers face fraught journey raising relatives’ kids
Kinship caregivers step up to raise relatives’ kids. Yet child welfare rules and tax laws can force them to make hard choices with bad trade-offs
Self-serve machines fail to serve consumers with disabilities
A new study shows the challenges consumers with disabilities face when using self-serve machines — and how those barriers can be fixed
