Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Kristy Kirkup
Publication Date: April 10, 2025 - 05:00
For people living with diabetes, the push for medical coverage isn’t political, it’s personal
April 10, 2025
Katharine Mackett recalls how, as a young person, her mother had to come to her elementary school daily to administer insulin and to check her blood sugars.She said it now costs more than $4,000 every year for medical interventions to manage her Type 1 diabetes. It is a heavy weight to carry along with a chronic disease that has demanded constant attention since her diagnosis in the late 1990s, at age 3.
Armoured dinosaurs with clubbed tails once roamed in what is now northeastern British Columbia, a new study suggests, leaving three-toed footprints across the landscape when the Rocky Mountains were still in their infancy.The study published this month in the peer-reviewed Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology analyzed fossilized footprints dating back about 100 million years in the Tumbler Ridge area, northeast of Prince George, as well as northwestern Alberta.It concluded the tracks belonged to a species of ankylosaurid ankylosaurs, which had a clubbed tail and three toes on its hind feet...
April 18, 2025 - 01:15 | Brenna Owen | The Globe and Mail
Craig Berube wanted to finish Thursday night healthy.
April 17, 2025 - 23:42 | Globalnews Digital | Global News - Ottawa
What would you do if you were stuck in one place and every day was exactly the same and nothing you did mattered?
That was the question Phil Connors asked in the movie Groundhog Day, but it could equally have been put to the federal leaders who took part in debates over the past two nights. Everything was exactly the same and nothing much mattered...
April 17, 2025 - 22:21 | John Ivison | National Post
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