I have a confession to make: Ever since COVID-19 struck, I’ve found it difficult to read even the best of books. I love nothing more than hunkering down with a fabulous read but last year my mind darted all over. I couldn’t sit still and I couldn’t focus on any book. Did this also happened to you? By the end of the year I had a stack of fourteen books on my bedside table all crying out for me to continue reading them. In the living room there were another twelve books and one or two books in the car. I tried to read them. I really did. Books have always been my escape but there was no escaping COVID-19 and the horrific stories of sickness and death. It didn’t help that my two eldest sons, John and Mike are both General Medicine Internists working in hospitals on the frontlines. Or, that my husband is working with Toronto Public Health. Fear took over. I gathered the books I’d started and put them all downstairs on my read-one-day shelf . I decided I’d wait until the New Year,...
If your child has seizures, it is important that you're well prepared for all neurology appointments. But just exactly how do you prepare for these appointments? How best can you navigate the healthcare system? These are some of the questions Dr. Richard Fralick, a medical doctor for 47 years and the father of a son with intractable seizures, is going to address at the next meeting of Epilepsy Toronto's Nights of Sharing. "It is most important to maximize the time spent with your care team," says Richard, a physician at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. "By being well prepared you have the best chance of getting your questions answered." Richard will address the importance of being able to describe your child's seizures, including any triggers that may have preceded the event, such as lights, sleep deprivation, head injury; characteristics of the seizures, such as eye fluttering, tongue biting, incontinence, change in consciousness; sy...