Please note that this blog has now been transferred directly to The Suburban Newspaper Website.
You can still view past entries here.
The new address is:
http://www.thesuburban.com/blogs/cohen_confidential_with_mike_cohen/
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Friday, 16 October 2015
Spectacular Nitro Circus hits the Bell Centre tonight
The world's greatest live action sports event hits the Bell Centre on Friday evening, October 16, with an all-new show.
Nitro Circus Live’s latest creation takes things to another level, as the best athletes in freestyle motocross (FMX), BMX and more will unite for an all-new production. Starring 17-time X Games medalist Travis Pastrana, the tour will feature unbelievable tricks and insane stunts, plus a whole new repertoire of daredevil fun. Also, look out for a host of outrageous contraptions — including trikes, a tall bike, a lazy boy recliner and more — all launching from the new jet-powered Nitro Slingshot.
To top it all off, for its latest event Nitro is going really retro, with the entire performance choreographed and styled as a 1920’s three-ring circus. This stunning set will transport you into the past, to an eerily haunting Big Top. This all-new theme provides the perfect backdrop for the Nitro crew’s aerial feats.
Organizers say to believe them when they declare you have never seen a circus like this before.
Doors open at 6:30 pm, with the show: 7:30 pm. Tickets range in price from $51.50 to $115.50.
Sunday, 11 October 2015
New concussion clinic at Decarie Square is a complete "management centre"
Concussions
have become more common in our everyday lives and it is not only due to sports
accidents. I recently went to the local fruit store where the cashier did not
look to healthy. She had just been diagnosed with a concussion after smashing
her head in the freezer.
For Montreal
business woman Kathy Cohen this all hit home after her daughter, an excellent
basketball player, suffered two concussions. When she sought assistance in the
medical community she realized that there were not too many options where this
could be dealt with under one roof. So she went about setting up her own
operation. Neurocircuit opened quietly at the end of
August at the revamped Decarie Square.
The state-of-the-art facility is located within the Kinatex Physiotherapy
headquarters.
This is a
complete concussion management center offering education, baseline testing,
post-injury assessment, post-injury therapy and strategies to facilitate return
to school, work and play. Jonathan Cohen, Kathy’s son, is a personal trainer
and works with kinesiologists Diane Saucer and Julia Peress. They also work
with physiotherapists, occupational
therapists and athletic therapists.
Jonathan Cohen |
“We are
offering a service that has expertise,
care and compassion,” says Kathy Cohen. “There is a personalized aspect to what
we do.”
The team at
Neurocircuit believe that proper management of concussions starts with
recognition followed by immediate and decisive action. Studies show that those
who understand the severity of concussions are more likely to report them. Dr.
Charles Tatar, a neurologist from the University of Toronto stated that there
is evidence that education about concussion leads to a reduction in the
incidence of concussion and improved outcomes from concussion.
Baseline testing is used to assess
an individual’s processing speed, attention span, learning ability, reaction
speed, eye tracking, balance and working memory. The
results would be compared to pre-injury or baseline results
to determine if there has been a decline in neurocognitive functioning,
reaction time, balance and/or vision. In the absence of a baseline test, the
post-injury results can be compared to normative data. Research has shown,
however, that the “average performance” scores represented in the normative
data can vary significantly thereby reducing the accuracy of the results.
An initial
visit will enable the clinician to gather medical history and to gain a
thorough understanding of the mechanism of injury and the severity of the
symptoms. This will be followed by a series of assessments designed to identify
and isolate the source of the symptoms. The assessments could include
computerized neurocognitive testing, balance evaluation, strength and
coordination screening, binocular vision screening, vestibular testing, a gait
assessment, a generalized neurological screen and an orthopaedic assessment of
secondary injuries. The various assessment tools provide objective results which
will help guide treatment. The referring physician will receive a report
outlining the results of the assessment.
Based on the
information gathered, an individualized treatment and training plan will be
developed. The clinician will design a treatment plan to target, isolate,
challenge and strengthen the areas of weakness. Using state of the art
assessment and treatment tools including Dynavision D2, Neurotracker, and
Fitlight, the clinician will be able to train the injured person’s cognitive,
visual and vestibular systems. In addition to clinical treatment, the
individual will be given a home exercise program in order to expedite recovery.
Progress reports will be available to referring physicians upon request.
Protocols
dictate that the individual should avoid any visual or cognitive stimulation
for the 48 hours following a concussion to allow his/her brain to heal. Post
concussive symptoms can vary in intensity and duration. Depending on the
symptoms, students may sometimes return to school with certain accommodations.
Social interaction in a school environment can play a positive role in the
resolution of emotional symptoms.
Once the athlete is able to complete the visual,
vestibular and/or cognitive exercises symptom free, the clinician will add a
physical component to the treatment sessions. Neurocircuit’s Return to Play
protocols will continue to challenge the athlete. Adding visual, vestibular,
reactive and decision-making components to the high intensity physical training
session will help prepare the athlete for game play. The decision to clear the athlete will be made
by the treating physician. Neurocircuit will provide the medical doctor with a
report with the most recent results.
The clinic is also getting in to sports vision training, which is intended to improve the athlete’s ability to process what they see. Many professional athletes are incorporating vision training in their weekly routines. Studies have shown vision training will boost performance in the following sports: baseball, hockey, basketball, football, tennis, soccer, golf and martial arts. Neurocircuit already has some elite athletes as clients.
Meanwhile, Neurocircuit will also be getting in to working
with youngsters who have Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Attention Deficit
and Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).
For more information call 514-739-8555 or email info@neurocircuit.ca
Breast Cancer Action Quebec aims to provide women with a more substantive discussion
Every October, for Breast Cancer Awareness Month, women are inundated with pink ribbons and simplistic
messages of “awareness” regarding breast cancer. They are encouraged to buy PINK for “the Cure.”
But Breast Cancer Action Quebec knows that shopping won’t stop breast cancer.
Their antidote is to provide women with a more substantive discussion on breast
cancer. This week three women will respond to the pressing question: Where is Feminism when My Body Needs It Most?
This panel discussion on Breast Cancer and the
Absence of a Feminist Analysis will take
place on Wednesday, October 14 ( 7 pm to 9 pm) at the Concordia University
Downtown Library Building (1400 de Maisonneuve West, LB-1019 -10th Floor).
As for the panelists, they
will include Julie Michaud, Luisa Molino and Jennifer Beeman,
Michaud is the coordinator of Concordia
University’s Centre for Gender Advocacy and a young woman facing breast cancer. She will
address the importance of a
feminist analysis while living the experience of the disease including
assumptions she confronts from her team of health professionals. Molino is the coordinator of the
pan-Canadian research project Cancer’s Margin,s affiliated with
the Simone de Beauvoir Institute of Concordia She will discuss the experience of breast
cancer for women of the sexual diversity and the social construction of the
disease. Beeman is the director of Breast Cancer Action
Québec. She will
present an overview of current feminist issues concerning breast cancer,
including a wide range of tough,
unanswered questions about the disease, for example the impact of social
inequalities and rates of mortality.
“We at
Breast Cancer Action Quebec understand deeply just how scary the words ‘breast
cancer’ are for any woman,” Beeman said in one of her blogs. “But too many
women are being unnecessarily treated for lesions that would never have caused
problems.
Jennifer Beeman |
Beeman was referring to a study on ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS),
traditionally considered a precursor to potentially fatal invasive breast
cancer, which shows that the massive detection and treatment of DCIS does not
lead to a decline in breast cancer mortality but does lead to significant
overtreatment
“For women to better understand
the issue of overtreatment, we need to change discussions of breast cancer from
fear-mongering approaches of ‘one in
nine’ to an understanding that it is a complicated set of diseases requiring
very different approaches, and in some cases, no intervention, but rather an
attentive surveillance. We need a discussion on current screening programs, a
re-examination of the treatment of DCIS and the development of less aggressive
treatments, as well as the creation observational registries to study the
evolution of these cases. We also clearly need better coordination of breast
cancer research agendas so that fundamental research on tumor biology is made a
priority.Individual women must be informed, prepared and encouraged to enter
into these discussions with their doctors when the diagnosis of breast cancer
is first raised. And finally, women in the women’s health movement must be
included in these discussions to develop the tools necessary to bring about
these changes.”
There is no admission
charge for this event which aims to provide a forum for discussion of breast
cancer that moves beyond the pink paradigm to take a deeper look at some real
issues of concern. Breast
Cancer Action Quebec (formerly Breast Cancer Action Montreal) has advocated for
breast cancer prevention and the elimination of environmental toxins linked to
the disease for 24 years.
Log on to www. acsqc.ca.