Media releases

  • Heart Health Month: New app from Brock research team aims to help catch heart disease early

    MEDIA RELEASE: 29 January 2019 – R00012

    Brock University — Communications & Public Affairs

    Grace Cabral knew she had a family history of cancer, but never thought the pain and discomfort she was experiencing at the age of 45 were early symptoms of heart disease.

    “When I think back, I know now that I had been having early warning signs of a heart attack for about seven months before it happened,” Cabral says. “If I would have known I was at risk and there was a tool to track my symptoms, I definitely would have used it.”

    February is Heart Health Month, and based on research examining how people want to learn about heart disease, Brock University researcher Sheila O’Keefe-McCarthy has launched a new web app to help identify symptoms before it’s too late.

    “The earlier you are able to recognize serious signs and symptoms that lead to heart disease, the faster you can mitigate them and move toward better heart health,” says O’Keefe-McCarthy, Assistant Professor in Brock’s Department of Nursing. “This cutting-edge, online screening tool will help patients and clinicians identify symptoms of encroaching heart disease and assess individuals at risk.”

    The premise behind the app is the development of the Prodromal Symptoms Screening Scale, which aims to proactively identify problematic symptoms — indicative of the development of coronary artery disease — that people experience months, weeks and days before a heart attack strikes.

    Along with the screening of possible prodromal symptoms, which are specific warning signs, the tool includes a risk factor profile including targeted screening for women who may have had gestational diabetes or hypertension, predisposing them to the development of heart disease earlier on in life.

    The online screening tool was developed by a team of 12 people, led by O’Keefe-McCarthy, including researchers from Brock and the University of New Brunswick, clinical partner Niagara Health, community partners and knowledge users from Heart Niagara, Cardiac Health Foundation of Canada and the Canadian Council of Cardiovascular Nurses, along with male and female patients.

    “Many patients who have suffered a heart attack look back on symptoms they have experienced, not realizing they were red flags,” says O’Keefe-McCarthy. “Through research funded by the Women’s College Hospital Research Institute’s Women’s Xchange, we learned that patients and health-care professionals wanted to become more educated about these early indicators and requested that information and tools were developed in this format.”

    Cabral’s participation in the research helped validate the findings that developed the 13-item tool that also identifies a person’s modifiable and non-modifiable risk factors, on top of the early warning signs.

    She wants the public to realize it can be difficult to recognize heart disease, because it is often not spoken about, particularly among women.

    “I would get a burning feeling in my chest or suddenly feel so winded, as if I couldn’t get enough air,” she says. “Since these symptoms usually occurred with increased activity or after a meal, I never thought anything of it. If I did, I rationalized it as being tired, out of shape, or that it must have been something I ate.”

    In April 2017, while on a walk with a friend, Cabral experienced what she described as hot burning water poured all over her chest. It was followed by difficulty breathing, severe back pain, and eventually a trip to the hospital, where it was discovered that her heart wasn’t getting enough oxygen.

    Cabral has been going to cardiac rehabilitation ever since and became involved in Brock’s Heart Health Education Research in September 2018.

    “My role in developing the screening tool has been to help interpret the study results as it applies to a woman’s experience of heart disease and act as a health advocate,” Cabral says. “The app is very user-friendly, and the results show various levels of urgency to go see your health-care provider.”

    The various spectrums include:

    • Green, which is a need to start thinking about heart health and risk factors
    • Yellow to orange, which is a moderate level of urgency and a recommendation to talk to a health-care provider
    • Red, which shows definite signs of a problem and a need for an immediate cardiac work up with detailed evaluation of your risk factors and overall heart health

    “The Prodromal Symptoms Screening Scale is intended to be used annually as a way to guide both patients and clinicians to identify encroaching heart disease, explore problematic symptoms and assess individuals at risk,” says O’Keefe-McCarthy.

    Future research is planned for the scale and will examine the differences in early warning symptoms between women and men who are first-time heart attack survivors versus those who have survived multiple heart attacks.

    The free heart health app is only available through the Prodromal Symptoms Screening Scale website. For more information on early warning signs and resources available, visit the Heart Innovation Research Program website.

    Brock University Assistant Professor of Nursing Sheila O’Keefe-McCarthy and research participant Grace Cabral are available to be interviewed by the media for this story.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

     – 30 –

    Categories: Media releases

  • Local musician’s legacy lives on through new Brock University jazz ensemble

    MEDIA RELEASE: 28 January 2019 – R00011

    If you’re a jazz lover in Niagara, you’ve likely crossed paths with Hugh Logan.

    Affectionately known as ‘Hughie,’ the Toronto-born musician was a prominent part of the local music community for decades — known as much for his upbeat demeanour and quirky antics as he was for being a valued and dedicated member of a number of bands.

    Logan died in 2016, but his legacy will live on for years thanks to a generous gift to Brock University’s Department of Music.

    Logan’s sister, Norma Bassett, has created a fund that will support a new student and community jazz ensemble, an accompanying instrumental jazz techniques course and the Hugh and Marie Logan Jazz Series. The gift is Bassett’s way of honouring her late brother and sister-in-law, who were loved for their musical accomplishments and larger-than-life personalities.

    The ensemble and three-concert series will launch in the fall out of Brock University’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts (MIWSFPA).

    Brock Department of Music Chair Matthew Royal said he is “extremely grateful” for the generous contribution.

    “This is a fitting way to memorialize Hugh and his wife Marie and we are delighted to be able to offer this programming for our students and musicians in the broader community,” he said.

    Logan’s love of music was evident to those in the Niagara community who knew him — as was his wife Marie’s never-wavering support of that passion.

    “Music was integral to Hugh’s being,” Bassett said simply. “It really was his life, and Marie was very supportive.”

    Encouraged by his father’s musical talents, Logan began playing the flute and clarinet in his early teens in the Toronto neighbourhood where we grew up.

    Among his early musical accomplishments was earning a place in the Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada, which he played in at the age of 15.

    A few years later, his father passed away from cancer, leaving Logan on his own to support his mother and sisters.

    The love of music instilled in him by his father stayed near to Logan’s heart, however.

    Bassett laughs when she recalls a time that Logan was reprimanded at work because he couldn’t stop dancing and singing along to a jazz number while working on a factory line.

    Logan later moved to Niagara, where he played with a number of bands across the region until his death at 90 years old. He played alto sax in the Niagara Falls Concert Band, flute in the Thorold Reed Band, flute and lead tenor sax with the Ambassadors Swing Band and baritone sax in the American-based Dick Griffo’s Jazz Workshop.

    He would occasionally sub in with the Jimmy Marando Swing Band, too, and Bassett said her brother was known to always carry his instruments with him, so he would be prepared if an opportunity to play presented itself. It wasn’t unusual for someone to need a fill-in and phone Logan up to come jam.

    “We wanted to do something to honour that passion for music,” added Bassett, “and giving back to students at Brock and other musicians in Niagara was the right choice.”

    Pamela Shanks, Executive Director, Development and Alumni Relations at Brock, said the gift serves to strengthen ties between the University and the community.

    “We thank Norma for her generous gift to the University,” said Shanks. “It will create new programming for our students and the Niagara music community, and for that we are grateful.”

    Royal added that although the Department has traditionally focused on classical music, the jazz ensemble provides an opportunity to bring students and the community together to learn a popular musical style.

    “Having students play alongside experienced musicians is a great way for them to learn jazz because they benefit from that cross-generational interaction,” he said. “The jazz series will also afford an opportunity for jazz lovers in the region to perform together and develop new creative collaborations.”

    The jazz ensemble will add to Brock’s existing roster of string and wind ensembles and will be open to Music and non-music majors, as well as members of the broader community. Anyone interested in auditioning should contact Royal at mroyal@brocku.ca for more details.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

     – 30 –

    Categories: Media releases