Giving Canadians Longer, Fuller Lives
Family flying a kite
You are helping the Foundation create a healthier Canada through innovations and tangible achievements that save thousands of Canadian lives. And who knows, it could someday save your life... or the life of someone close to you. That's how we all win!
Heart disease and stroke take 1 in 3 Canadians before their time
A looming Healthcare Tsunami
Storm image Over the past few decades, dramatic shifts in population and lifestyle trends point to a startling increase in the number of people needing treatment for cardiovascular disease and stroke. These trends involve Canada's aging population, cardiovascular disease as the #1 cause of death for Canadian women and the accompanying gender gap in diagnosis, treatment and care, an increasingly diverse population with many minorities at greater risk, a growing crisis in cardiovascular disease among Aboriginal communities, and epidemic levels of obesity among Canadians. Together, these trends warn of a looming healthcare crisis of epic proportions.
Every 7 minutes someone dies of heart disease or stroke.
Mother and DaughterStill Today's Most Serious Disease.

Despite advances in research and treatment, heart disease and stroke STILL remain a leading burden on Canadians' health.
  • 9 in 10 Canadians have at least one risk factor for heart disease or stroke.
  • Heart disease and stroke is the #1 killer of women.
At Work in Your Community
 Nurse performing CPR We're embracing these challenges with bold, visionary initiatives to improve prevention and patient care in communities throughout Canada. Here are a few ways we're making a difference:
  • Teaching Ontarians how to perform CPR and equipping schools, community centres and public spaces with defibrillators
  • Equipping doctors and nurses with innovative tools to manage and treat high blood pressure
  • Supporting Diversity programs to raise awareness in many of Ontario ethno-cultural communities
  • Encouraging active living and awareness in youth and children, with walk-to-school programs, active recreation development and HeartSmart Kids™ toolkits
  • To help Canadians reduce their risk, the Foundation has launched two smart phones apps. My Heart&Stroke Blood Pressure Plan,™ My Heart&Stroke Health Check™ Recipe Helper. Apps can be downloaded free here.
Research Achievements
Baby and Mother's HandIn 1994 Heart and Stroke funded research that led to the world's first in-utero surgery to repair a congenital heart defect in an unborn child, offering expectant parents the chance to give birth to a healthy baby. Every ticket you purchase helps us save lives and make headway in the fight against heart disease and stroke. Some examples of our research achievements:
  • In 1976 Heart and Stroke researchers discovered that aspirin reduces the risk of stroke, giving patients a practical way to manage their risk.
  • In 1976 Heart and Stroke cardiologists introduced life-saving CPR to Canadians, dramatically improving the odds that a person suffering a cardiac arrest will survive while waiting for an ambulance.
  • Since 2006, thanks to the Foundation's defibrillator program, nearly 30 people ranging in age from 12 to 77 have been saved.
Click here to see the map of where you help save lives across Ontario

Kaylen Leonienco

When Kaylen was one month old, doctors discovered a narrow heart valve. An emergency balloon catheter helped, but it wasn't a cure. She needed a second surgery at age 18.

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Gary Ouelette

Gary was thrilled when he won the million dollar prize in the Heart&Stroke Lottery. He knew he was supporting a good cause, but never thought he'd need the Foundation's help.

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Janet Parr

Janet knows that heart disease can strike without warning. At the age of just 42, she was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. Since then she's had four major surgeries.

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Robert Martin

Robert Martin used to play golf and hockey four times a week. He received a heart transplant in 2009 and had to slow down his active lifestyle - but went into cardiac arrest two weeks later.

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KAYLEN LEONIENCOKAYLEN LEONIENCO

When Kaylen was one month old, doctors discovered she had a narrow heart valve. She was turning blue and not breathing well. An emergency balloon catheterization helped to open her heart so more blood could get through, but it wasn't a cure. She needed a second surgery at age 18 to give her a larger valve. Now, Kaylen is 20 and she volunteers for the Foundation because she says she appreciates everything we do for people like her. "The Foundation needs our help to continue their work in education, awareness and research which give people like me longer, fuller lives."

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GARY OUELLETTEGARY OUELLETTE

Gary was thrilled when he won the million dollar prize in the Heart&Stroke Lottery. He knew he was supporting a good cause, but never predicted he'd be one of the people the Foundation's work would help. In 2010, Gary had a mini-stroke. Six months later, he was rushed to surgery for a triple bypass. "You don't think of those things until they actually happen," he says. "If you're going to buy a lottery ticket, this is the one to support. The Foundation's work gave me more time to live my life and I'm just one of many people they've helped."

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JANET PARRJANET PARR

Janet knows that heart disease can strike without warning. At the age of 42, she was diagnosed with congestive heart failure. She's had four major surgeries. Now, she has what is essentially an artificial heart. "It circulates my blood, which my heart is too weak to do on its own. It's a bridge until I can have a heart transplant," she says. "I feel it's important to support the Foundation because the research advances they fund could be vital to helping me and people like me get more years of life, of joy and of time with people we love."

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ROBERT MARTINROBERT MARTIN

Robert Martin used to play golf and hockey four times a week, but in 1998 he felt unusually tired. He found out he had dilated cardiomyopathy, which reduces the heart's ability to pump blood. He had to slow down his active life. He received a heart transplant in 2009, but went into cardiac arrest two weeks later. Now, he can't do as much activity, but he says cardiac rehab helped him get back to walking a mile and a half every day. "I'm so thankful to the Foundation for giving me a second chance at a full life."

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Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario