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Waterloo Regional Housing with the help of the Propel Centre for Population Health Impact at the University of Waterloo has implemented a 100% no smoking policy on all new leases as of April 1st, 2011 after many senior residents and individuals state they “are bothered” by the smoke and fear for health concerns.

Ryan Kennedy, a Propel scientist who evaluated the project, has created a video to encourage other communities to enact similar smoke-free policies in multi-unit dwellings.

Read Media Release

(University of Waterloo News Release)

WATERLOO, Ont. (Monday, Aug. 29, 2011) - An ambitious partnership involving the Ontario government, postsecondary sector and Schlegel Villages will develop a centre of excellence for research, training and innovation in senior health care and wellness at the University of Waterloo. The goal is to help Canada better prepare for an aging population.

Study by Richard Wells, director of the Centre of Research Expertise for the Prevention of Musculoskeletal Disorders based in the faculty of applied health sciences, examines the link between use of hand-held devices and pain and suggests the consequences often extend well beyond the thumb alone.

“If we’re creating a lot of 17-year-olds, 19-year-olds who have more chronic shoulder, neck and arm problems, then they got a lifetime of problems ahead of them.”

Read more in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

“There is a reason that most elite marathon runners are of moderate height and very thin,” says Waterloo’s Richard Hughson. Although marathon runners typically share physical traits, it’s not the decisive factor. Dave McGinn discusses different body styles and things to consider.

Read article in Globe and Mail

With 14 percent of drivers being over the age of 65 and rapidly increasing with the baby-boomers, how old is too old to be behind the wheel?

A new national study on licensing policies for older drivers co-led by Waterloo professor Anita Myers found that Canada is a regulatory patchwork of requirements for license renewal, reporting practices, and appeals processes.

Read article in Globe and Mail

Researchers in Waterloo’s faculty of applied health sciences have collaborated with RBC to design a new innovative planning tool to help Canadians assess the impact of caregiving for aging friends and relatives. “Your Caregiving Planner” has been developed by the RBC  Retirement Research Centre at the University of Waterloo as an interactive resource to help Canadians evaluate caregiving needs on an ongoing basis.

Read article in Canada Newswire

A new report from the Canadian Index of Wellbeing based in Waterloo’s faculty of applied health sciences investigates the state of the environment's effect on our nation's wellbeing.

"Canadians need to counter some serious environmental threats to the country and planet or there will be consequences for their wellbeing," says the Hon. Roy J. Romanow, chair of the advisory board of the Canadian Index of Wellbeing.

See article online