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We’re at a pivotal time in healthcare.
Our society is aging and developing more complex needs. The number of people living with disease and debilitating conditions is on the rise. At University Health Network (UHN), we’re constantly reimagining healthcare. We have a lot of big and bold ideas, and a lot of work to do. And we can’t do it alone.
Dr. Valiante’s research and surgical innovations continue to save lives everyday but we need help.
“They gave me my life back”
Heather Bos made a donation in honour of her healthcare providers after suffering years of severe seizures. (Photo: Courtesy Heather Bos)
In 2013, 27-year-old Heather was diagnosed with epilepsy after suffering from seizures since she was a teen. Over the next four years her health steadily declined – due to daily seizures she couldn’t finish university and was unable to hold a job.
Medications weren’t working, and her doctor was out of treatment options. Heather was losing hope that she’d be able to live a normal life again.
Thankfully, in 2017 she was referred to University Health Network (UHN) to get the help she needed. She met Dr. Danielle Andrade, a neurologist in the Epilepsy Program within UHN’s Krembil Brain Institute, and knew she was in good hands.
Only three days after her initial appointment with Dr. Andrade, Heather was admitted to UHN’s in-patient Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU). She had multiple stays throughout 2017, undergoing invasive and isolating testing and treatment to find the cause of her seizures. Her care team never gave up, they were determined to help Heather.
The testing required Heather to be hooked up to machines and confined to her hospital room for weeks at a time. Friends and family came to visit, but Heather received the most interaction from the researchers who visited her each day, as she had agreed to participate in an ongoing study for epilepsy research.
“The researchers at UHN were so kind and helpful, they gave me hope every day,” says Heather. “It was hard, but they motivated me to keep going.”
Eventually the team realized that medications would not alleviate the seizures and non-invasive treatment was not an option for Heather. Her extended stays in the EMU allowed Dr. Taufik Valiante, neurosurgeon and Surgical Director for UHN’s Epilepsy Program, to evaluate whether she was a candidate for the most invasive treatment yet – brain surgery.