When you know better, you do better. It’s why research is so important!
A century ago
100 years ago, Canadian scientist and physician Frederick Banting, won the Nobel Prize in Medicine for his co-discovery of insulin and its therapeutic potential.
As we know, his discovery would transform – and save – the lives of millions of people with diabetes in Canada and around the world.
Not quite a century ago, I worked at the Diabetes Canada , and, in 1989, was present at Banting House (the “Birthplace of Insulin”) in London, Ontario when Her Majesty The Queen Mother unveiled the bronze statue of Banting and lit the Flame of Hope, a flame which will burn until a cure for diabetes is found.?It is a very special memory for me.
A century later
A century after Banting’s remarkable breakthrough however, diabetes continues to extract an enormous toll on the health and well-being of the world’s population. According to Diabetes Canada, eleven million Canadians are living with diabetes or prediabetes.
In addition to kidney, eye and heart disease, diabetes can also cause nerve damage (or diabetic peripheral neuropathy) which can potentially lead to infection and limb amputation.
In Canada, approximately 7,300 people undergo a diabetes-related lower limb amputation (LLA) every year.
Find the gap to improve health
West Park Healthcare Centre has long established itself as a leader in amputee services and today delivers the largest in-patient amputee rehabilitation service in Canada.?
Indeed, such is its rich history, that it was to West Park that Terry Fox visited to repair his right prosthetic leg which had become damaged during his 1981 Marathon of Hope.
And while West Park’s amputee service continues to transform the lives of over 2,000 patients a year, we remain focused on improving the health outcomes of our patients at West Park and around the world by leading research to develop best practices and make the health system work better locally.
Setting the agenda…Building consensus
An excellent example of this credo in action is the leadership demonstrated by West Park’s Research Scientist Dr Crystal MacKay.
In 2021, at the peak of the pandemic lockdowns, Dr MacKay worked with her colleagues around Canada to set a research agenda for on physical activity for people with lower limb amputations across the country.?This virtual consensus conference identified several key questions to improve health outcomes in the recovery of people who had a lower limb amputation (LLA). A high priority was to develop and test a peer support intervention to promote physical activity in people with dysvascular LLA.
While the physiological, psychological, and social benefits of physical activity are well established, there are gaps in our understanding of effects of exercise or physical activity interventions for adults with LLA, particularly for individuals with dysvascular LLA.
Individuals with LLA due to diabetes, or other vascular disease, often have comorbidities, including higher rates of cardiovascular disease than the general population. They are at risk of amputation in the contralateral limb and have a high (30%) mortality rate at one year.
领英推荐
However, to date no studies have assessed what a physical activity behaviour change intervention could achieve for people with LLA.
To address this gap, Dr MacKay and a team of a team of clinical researchers, clinicians and people with LLA co-created co-created a physical activity intervention called IMproving Physical Activity through Coaching and Technology following Lower Limb Loss (IMPACT-L3), to support physical activity behaviour change in people with dysvasular LLA.
To assess the feasibility of conducting a definitive randomized controlled trial (RCT), Dr MacKay and her team will conduct a pilot RCT. The intervention group will have access to once-weekly virtual peer coaching sessions with a gender and level of amputation-matched peer trained in brief action planning; a web-based physical activity toolkit; and a wearable activity monitor for 12 weeks. Participants will be recruited from multiple sites across the country as a result of the collaborations Dr MacKay has been able to build.
It's what drives and inspires
Having set the agenda and successfully led the research team through a highly collaborative process, Dr MacKay subsequently applied for CIHR (Canadian Institutes of Health Research) grant funding. Navigating an intensely competitive and multi-stage review process, Dr MacKay’s application was one of 1,799 grants submitted, which was reviewed and shortlisted and shortlisted again; ultimately to a final scoring in which Dr MacKay’s proposal was awarded first place in her peer review committee.?
“If we don’t continually improve…we don’t just stay the same...we actually fall behind. If you want it to be better, then let’s be that change. As the author Maya Angelou wrote: ‘when you know better, you do better.’ By integrating care, research, and education, we will know better and, consequently, we will do better for our patients. And that’s what drives and inspires me.”??Dr. Crystal MacKay
Another first
Dr MacKay’s first place research application is yet another first.?In living memory, there has not been a rehabilitation research grant that was ranked number one by this panel.
It is an excellent example of West Park’s bench strength as a speciality hospital driving a collaborative research agenda and establishing consensus across multiple disciplines and multiple program sites.
It’s another first for Canadian scientific research, and, just like Banting, has the potential to not just improve the lives of Canadians, but could positively impact anyone, anywhere, living with a lower limb amputation and help them get their lives back.
When the new hospital building opens in November 2023, West Park’s programs will double in capacity for patients to access care. The expansion in our capacity will include the Prosthetics and Orthotics department supporting our amputee service.?We will enhance our full-service manufacturing facility to include state of the art 3D-Printing to build personalized prostheses and orthoses which will save both time and money and, most importantly, improve the quality of life and independence of our amputation rehabilitation patients.
Looking to the future
As we look to the future, the projected numbers and associated costs for diabetes-related illnesses and amputations are staggering.
Our enhanced amputee service and expanded capacity to serve more patients, illustrates West Park’s commitment to help ensure that people can access the care they need, when they need it, in a facility best suited to providing it. ?And our commitment to research like Dr MacKay’s leadership to deliver best practices to achieve the best health outcomes for our patients.
The new West Park building will result in better patient outcomes, greater efficiency, and sustainability for the entire health system.
The Flame of Hope at Banting House still burns, and will burn until a cure for diabetes is found.
West Park will continue to be inspired both by Banting’s pioneering research and the endless possibilities of science, and by the courage and determination of our patients who, despite enormous challenges, refuse to give up and instead, proudly and loudly state: “I am not done.” ?
CEO @ West Park Foundation | Philanthropy Expert
1 年Sir Frederick Banting Banting House National Historic Site
CEO @ West Park Foundation | Philanthropy Expert
1 年It was a special day at Diabetes Canada 's Banting House National Historic Site with The Queen Mother