Heart-warming care. Ground-breaking facilities. Read about it here. Sign up today.
Month: May 2020
Our North Shore Lend a Hand Fund, initiated by Chan Sisters Foundation, provides short-term support to older, low-income adults who struggle with chronic health conditions and are on their own. It’s a new initiative unique to North and West Vancouver.
Community health care workers have identified gaps in care and the additional services that can keep clients well in their homes to reduce their risk of homelessness, cut down on the number of repeat visits to the emergency department and limit the negative impacts that medical conditions have on their day-to-day lives.
With small grants available from the Lend a Hand Fund, our community care providers can encourage social interaction by paying for group meals and activities and also offer vital health education.
Our community care workers visit dozens of clients every day. They see the challenges and understand how and where the Fund can make the biggest impact.
Hear how the Lend a Hand Fund is changing lives in the community.
“There are so many costs that so many of us take for granted being able to pay. Whether it’s dental work or being able to pay your deductible for prescription medications. These small costs that come up for people living in poverty can be an enormous source of stress and can mean the difference between paying for rent or life-saving medication.”
Katie Hume, Team Lead at Health Connection Clinic
When you make a donation to the Lend a Hand Fund, you help bridge the gap between what the government provides and what our vulnerable older adults need to overcome the many challenges that they face.
Donate to the Lend a Hand Fund
Last September medical teams from across Lions Gate Hospital and a team of paramedics came together to take part in an emergency stroke simulation. It was part of an exhaustive year-long effort that has had a dramatic impact on the care that stroke patients receive at LGH.
A volunteer played a 62-year-old woman suffering from left-sided weakness. Two million brain cells die every minute during a stroke and the aim of the life-like training session was to get the patient from admission, to diagnosis to treatment as quickly as possible.
The team aced the session and reduced the time from admission to medication from 60 to 17 minutes. Less than two hours later during a debriefing session a Code 77 (stroke alert) was called on the hospital PA system. It was time for the team to put their training to a very critical test. In a weird case of deja vu, the real, live patient was a 62-year-old woman presenting with weakness on the left side.
With the simulation session still fresh in their minds, the physicians, nurses and paramedics were able to maintain the 17-minute timeline from admission to clot-busting drug. Three days later the patient walked out of LGH hospital with no long-term side effects.
“It was such a powerful moment. I still get goose bumps thinking about it,” says Marieve Legrand, Stroke and TIA Coordinator (Transient Ischemia Attack) for Neurosciences at LGH.
There have been many more similar cases since the stroke collaborative was launched.
Lions Gate Hospital is an Advanced Stroke Centre which has the technology and expertise to provide one of the highest levels of stroke care in the province. Last year 275 people suffering from acute stroke symptoms were treated in Emergency and on the Neurology ward at LGH. And it’s not just patients from the North Shore, people who live in the Sea-to-Sky corridor and Sunshine Coast are brought directly to LGH if a recent stroke is suspected.
Between October 2018 and October 2019 LGH was involved in the province-wide Hyper Acute Stroke Collaborative in an effort to improve survival rates and shorten recovery for stroke patients. Marieve Legrand coordinated the effort at LGH which included medical professionals from Emergency, Medical Imaging, and Neurology.
Time of arrival at Emergency to CT Scan has been reduced by 20 mins and the turn-around time for patients that need to be transferred to a specialist procedure at Vancouver General Hospital has been reduced by 35 minutes.
Education, simulation sessions, and awareness raising were all part of an effort to ensure that all the relevant staff have access to the latest medical research, were given time to develop the most efficient clinical practices and had the opportunity to hone their clinical skills.
Thank you very much to BlueShore Financial for matching gifts totalling $10,000 to our COVID-19 Emergency Response Fund. The total was met on Tuesday June 2nd, 2020. Thank you for helping us double our impact – turning $10,000 into $20,000!
The Lions Gate Hospital Foundation has allocated a total of $955,000 from the COVID-19 Fund to the purchase of life-saving equipment including ventilators, respiratory aids, thermometers, and physiological monitors.
At BlueShore Financial, our North Shore roots run deep with nearly 80 years of serving the community. Now more than ever, we need to band together to protect the health and well-being of our community members. We are proud to evolve our 25 year partnership with Lions Gate Hospital to help the North Shore COVID-19 Emergency Response Fund through the Double Your Impact program.