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49 Results:
Medella Health smart contact lens that monitors glucose levels for people with diabetes
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Health & Wellness
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Waterloo project wins top honours in Dyson competition

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University of Waterloo
Apr 3, 2017
James Dyson says Medella Health’s smart contact lens shows how good design and engineering can improve lives. A smart contact lens that monitors glucose levels captured one of two international runner-up awards in the 2016 James Dyson Award competition, the third University of Waterloo student project to win a top prize in three years. Medella Health, co-founded in 2013 by Huayi Gao, a Waterloo nanotechnology engineering graduate, Waterloo science graduate Maarij Baig, and Harry Gandhi, who
Daniel David Palmer, the Father of Chiropractic
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Health & Wellness
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A Canadian Invented Chiropractic Care

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Janis Nostbakken
Mar 28, 2017
Look up the word “chiropractic” in a dictionary and you might think it was a form of medicine practiced in ancient Greece. Not so, at least not by that name. The word does come from the Greek (cheir “hand” + praktikos “practical”), but it was a Canadian who invented it. Daniel David (D.D.) Palmer was born in Port Perry, Canada West (now Ontario) in 1845. By the time he was 20, D.D. had emigrated to the U.S. where he first encountered a “magnetic healer,” one who claimed to cure illness by
Teenage inventors
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Agriculture
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Teen could bring clean water to millions

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Jen Giller
Mar 8, 2017
Rachel Brouwer is featured in Innovation150’s national public awareness campaign. Learn more. Rachel Brouwer isn’t old enough to drive, but she’s got her own billboard, her own Wikipedia page, and an asteroid named after her. The asteroid dedication – in addition to a $1,500 prize – was for coming in second at the 2016 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair after winning a gold medal at the 2015 Canada-Wide Science Fair. It’s all because of an invention of Brouwer’s that could provide
New age 21 century wedge free wood/log splitter
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Arts & Design
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New age 21 century wedge free wood/log splitter

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Walter Rodler
Jan 29, 2017
My inventiveness started at age 13 when I injured my hand operating a wood/log splitter, as so many thousands of others do, every year all over the world. After my many years of in several trades and engineering jobs, I started the research needed in development of a total new idea without the use of the traditional WEDGE for log splitters. I have tried 73 different designs and the 74th was the answer to improved safety, much less power usage, frame thickness, less welding and so on. Not
Colonel George Gallie Nasmith Jacket photograph from the book On the Fringe of the Great Fight, by G. G. Nasmith McClelland, Goodchild & Stewart, 1917
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Health & Wellness
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Colonel George Gallie Nasmith: Mobile Water Filtration for the Allies

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Canadian War Museum
Sep 12, 2016
George Gallie Nasmith was a Provincial Board of Health chemist and the Director of Laboratories at the Department of Health of the City of Toronto. Nasmith tried to enlist for service during the First World War but was turned away because of his height: 4 ft. 6 in. He appealed and eventually received authority to organize a laboratory to test and purify drinking water for Canadians overseas. He was responsible for the water supply at Valcartier Camp, in Quebec, in 1914, and later served in the
Compressing Earth Blocks
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Earth & Environment
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GlobalMedic | Compressed Earth Blocks

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GlobalMedic
Aug 15, 2016
To support families who have lost their homes as a result of disasters, GlobalMedic operates an innovative shelter response using Compressed Earth Block (CEB) technology. By simply compacting earth from the ground using the CEB machine, a strong, durable and environmentally friendly building material is produced. These blocks are then used to construct new houses. These homes not only protect families in the event of future disasters but also create employment, strengthen local participation and
Second World War Nutrition Poster: Canadian War Museum 19750317-073
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Food
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Canada’s Food Guide: Wartime Eating for a Healthier Postwar Population

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Canadian War Museum
Jun 30, 2016
The first Canadian food guide, The Official Food Rules, was conceived in 1942 as a means of helping consumers navigate the difficulties of wartime rationing. If followed, the guide would ensure high nutritional standards for the men and women contributing to the war effort, decrease malnutrition associated with poverty, and improve the general health of Canadians. Scientists, medical doctors, academics and social welfare workers began working together in 1938 and eventually recommended the food
Acticoat™ – One of world’s biggest advances in burn/wound care
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Medicine
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Acticoat™ - One of world's biggest advances in burn/wound care

Profile picture for user University of Alberta
University of Alberta
Mar 15, 2016
Acticoat™ has saved the lives and limbs of thousands of people around the world and dramatically improved burn and chronic wound care. The nanostructured silver bandage is considered to be the world’s first therapeutic application of nanotechnology. In the 1990s, Robert Burrell saw the potential to apply nanotechnology to medicine. As research director at Alberta’s Westaim Biomedical and working with the University of Alberta, Burrell developed the nanocrystalline structure that unlocked the
Mussels
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Health & Wellness
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The Good, the Bad and the Toxic

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National Research Council Canada
Nov 2, 2015
In 1987, National Research Council of Canada (NRC) scientists worked around the clock to find out why three Canadians had died and hundreds became sick after eating mussels. The villain, a rare toxin produced by algae, was traced to a single area of Prince Edward Island. Ever since, NRC has helped Canadian food inspectors ensure that popular seafood is safe to eat. Now, NRC is developing advanced tools to provide early warnings of toxic algae before shellfish become contaminated. In 2002, NRC’s
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