Northern medical school receives funding to research occupational cancer
A research team at Greater Sudbury's NOSM University has received $200,000 in funding to examine occupational-related cancer caused by radon inhalation.
NOSM University, formerly the Northern Ontario School of Medicine, teaches medical students at campuses in Sudbury and Thunder Bay and was the first Canadian medical school to be given degree-granting status as an independent university. An undated photo of the NOSM Sudbury campus. (Supplied/NOSM University)
The Canadian Cancer Society (CCS), along with the Canadian Institutes of Health Research-Institute of Cancer Research and 14 workers’ compensation boards and labour unions across the country, announced a new program on Wednesday to decrease the number of cancer diagnoses caused by the workplace.
Morgane Morabito, the Cancer Society’s senior manager of research programs, said there's a lack of research and awareness about cancer caused by the workplace.
"Each year, there are approximately 10,000 newly diagnosed cancer that that would be preventable," she said.
"That could be preventable if there was guidelines, for example, about prevention. If we have a better understanding why where they come from, what are the risks that would cause those kind of workplace related cancers?"
An undated photo of Morgane Morabito, the Canadian Cancer Society’s senior manager of research programs. (Morgane Morabito/X)
NOSM’s study is one of seven projects across Canada that will receive funding from the CCS Workplace Cancer Research Grants: Preventing Occupational Cancers program.
Chris Thome, an assistant professor at medical school who will lead the project, told CTV News that little is known about radon inhalation's effect on the lungs.
"Health Canada cites radon gas as the second leading cause of lung cancer but there's not a lot of research has actually been done into understanding what happens to the tissue in our lungs when we inhale radon and what the actual levels of risk are," he said.
“We want to understand more about how radon actually interacts with our lung tissue, what those risk levels are."
Chris Thome, an assistant professor at NOSM University will lead a new study examining occupational-related cancer caused by radon inhalation. (Supplied/NOSM University)
Thome said some parts of northern Ontario have naturally higher levels of radon.
"It's something that we're exposed to every day. Radon gas is a naturally occurring radioactive gas. But even though it's something that we're all exposed to everyday, we still don't know a lot about it," he said.
"This research will not only advance our understanding of how radon interacts with biological tissue, it will help us to understand the risks."
Thome said radon is found in basements and underground, so it especially poses a risk to miners.
"A lot of these mines do have physical mitigation strategies where they things like ventilation within the mines that helps to reduce radon levels," he said.
"But some residential houses and some occupations have radon levels that are above the Health Canada guidelines and so we're trying to investigate ways that we can prevent any adverse effects to those individuals."
Morabito said a number of professions face higher risks.
"It's going to be manufacturing, it's going to be construction, it's going to be mining, law enforcement and enforcement and healthcare, and shift work," she said.
"The number right now is like 6.8 million is the pool of workers currently that will be fighting those criteria at risk of workplace-related cancers. So it is an urgent need to really protect these workers across Canada."
Thome said the goal of the research is to also find solutions through the development of a dietary supplement.
"The supplement could be used as a way to prevent some of that damage that can happen to your lungs when you inhale radon and ultimately prevent lung cancer formation," he said.
A research team -- including three staff and three students -- at NOSM University has received $200,000 in funding to examine occupational-related cancer caused by radon inhalation. (Amanda Hicks/CTV News Northern Ontaio)
Through a separate grant, he said a custom-designed radon chamber would be built for controlled experiments to look at different concentrations of radon gas and look at the physiology of what happens to the lung when various model systems are exposed to radon.
Thome said NOSM received its first instalment of the grant and will now begin experiments and data collection – adding three students and two additional faculty members will work on the project, with preliminary findings released sometime next year.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Son charged with 1st-degree murder after father's death on B.C.'s Sunshine Coast
A 26-year-old man has been charged with first-degree murder in connection to the death of his father on the Sunshine Coast last year.
Loblaw using body-worn cameras at 2 Calgary stores as part of pilot project
Loblaw is launching a pilot program that will see employees at two Calgary locations don body-worn cameras in an effort to increase safety.
China is raising its retirement age, now among the youngest in the world's major economies
Starting next year, China will raise its retirement age for workers, which is now among the youngest in the world's major economies, in an effort to address its shrinking population and aging work force.
Trudeau says Ukraine can strike deep into Russia with NATO arms, Putin hints at war
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Ukraine should be allowed to strike deep inside Russia, despite Moscow threatening that this would draw Canada and its allies into direct war.
Driver charged with killing NHL's Johnny Gaudreau and his brother had .087 blood-alcohol level
The driver charged with killing NHL hockey player Johnny Gaudreau and his brother Matthew as they bicycled on a rural road had a blood-alcohol level of .087, above the .08 legal limit in New Jersey, a prosecutor said Friday.
Sisters finally see the Canadian 'aviation artifact' built by their father nearly 90 years ago
Two sisters have finally been reunited with a plane their father built 90 years ago, that is also considered an important part of Canadian aviation history.
What's behind the boom? The Manitoba community that nearly doubled in a decade
For decades, the Town of Ste. Anne was stagnant, but that all changed about 10 years ago. Now it is seeing one of the highest spikes of growth in the province.
Canadian warship seizes 1,400 kilos of cocaine off Central America
A Canadian warship has seized more than 1,400 kilograms of cocaine during an anti-drug-trafficking operation in Central America.
'I couldn't form the words': 23-year-old Ont. woman highlights need for rural health care after stroke
The experience of 23-year-old Muskoka, Ont., resident Robyn Penniall, who recently had a stroke, comes as concerns are being raised about the future of health care in her community.