Bloorview Kids Rehab

Name :

Bloorview Kids Rehab

Address  :

150 Kilgour Road

Town  :

Toronto

State  :

Ontario

Country  :

CANADA

Post Code:

M4G 1R8

Phone  :

416 425 6220

Fax  :

416 425 6591

Web URL  :

Bloorview Kids Rehab
Specialization
  • Dentistry
Facilities

Description

About Us
Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital formerly Bloorview Kids Rehab is Canadas largest childrens rehabilitation hospital

Our vision is to create a world of possibility for kids with disability

We pioneer treatments technologies therapies and realworld programs that give children with disabilities the tools to participate fully in life

Holland Bloorview serves about 7000 children each year with about 600 inpatient admissions and 58000 outpatient visits Holland Bloorview is a worldclass teaching hospital fully affiliated with the University of Toronto We train future healthcare specialists in the field of childhood disability The Bloorview Research Institute is located onsite allowing us to integrate cuttingedge research and teaching with frontline care to improve childrens quality of life

Our stateoftheart building has been recognized by the International Academy for Design and Health as an inspirational buildingwhich speaks to a childs right to participate in our society

We see children with cerebral palsy acquired brain injury muscular dystrophy amputation epilepsy spina bifida arthritis cleftlip and palate autism and other developmental disabilities A small number of our clients have complex chronic diseases that require roundtheclock medical care

MISSION
Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital provides specialized programs and clinical care for children and youth with rehabilitation and complex care needs to enable them to participate in life to the fullest

We are Canadas leading pediatric rehabilitation teaching hospital dedicated to being at the forefront of clinical care research and education As a key resource for Ontario we are committed to partnerships to build clinical academic and community capacity to enhance the quality of life for children with rehabilitation and complex care needs and their families

VISION
A World of Possibility

VALUES
Caring

Client and Familycentred care

Excellence

Innovation

Partnership

Respect


History

Though there are many chapters to the evolving narrative of Bloorview Kids Rehab the heart of the story revolves around a shared spirit of quiet determination and compassion community and vision For over the past 100plus years this facility has emerged as one of the most vital childrens rehabilitation centres in Canada

Through its many incarnations and locations through the years and especially seeing what it has become today with our new worldclass facility the success of Bloorview reflects the contributions large and small of those who realized the importance of such a facility But it was thanks to a group who in the late nineteenth century decided to make their vision a reality to as it were turn disability into possibility

In 1899 22 women gathered for tea one afternoon to discuss the establishment of a facility dedicated solely to the care children with chronic illness and physical disability This was not your average group of women Eighteen of those in attendance were founding members of The Hospital for Sick Children with the President of the group being Mrs CS Gzowski

This group referred to themselves as the Ladies Committee and they envisioned opening a facility that could care for chronically ill physically handicapped children It didnt take long for matters to evolve as come December 16 1899 with the help of public contributions donations of furniture and a twoyear rentfree agreement for a home at 138 Avenue Road thanks to the offer put forth by Mr and Mrs GA Cox the Home for Incurable Children opened its doors ready to accommodate 15 children

It didnt take long for the board to realize that the demand for admittance outpaced capacity in the home By 1907 the board purchased a larger property at 152 Bloor St East where 26 children could live

Sustaining the home in those early years demanded tight purse strings and a reliance on the generosity of others This level of community support helped define the support that the home enjoyed from early on and is one of the enduring legacies that has been passed along through the generations However the administration managed to not only keep the facility running but also give the children the opportunity to advance their education In 1912 the Toronto School Board appointed a teacher to work with the children for two hours every day By 1921 the Board granted funding for a fullday class the morning devoted to academics and the afternoons focusing on crafts In 1934 the Homes school became an auxiliary of Rosedale Public School

The 1930s also featured the construction of the longawaited Nurses Residence which put the staff in much more comfortable quarters on the grounds of the Home rather than offsite down Jarvis St It was around this period that the Home adopted an additional name that more appropriately captured the spirit of the facility The House of Happiness As the Homes Medical Supervisor Dr Maynard once remarked There are more smiles to the square foot in this place than in any other I know

The 1950s marked a period of expansion in the Home thanks to a significant bequest by Mrs Emma Vincent Campbell This allowed space for more residents now numbering 40 but more importantly the renovation of the main building established room for occupational physical and speech therapies A new auditorium doubled as a classroom and an additional classroom and rumpus room were developed this new wing named the Maude N Addition in recognition of Mrs Gooderhams many years of contributing to the Board

Clearly the model of what Bloorview has become today started to be shaped with the addition of these inhouse services Soon more physicians who were also on staff at Sick Kids were being appointed to help out on an ongoing basis lending their expertise in such fields as Orthopedics GenitoUrinary General Surgery Plastic Surgery and Dermatology Consultants in Psychiatry and Psychology were also appointed

The 1950s also saw the establishment of a facility that would play a part in the future evolution of the Home The establishment of the Ontario Crippled Childrens Centre at 350 Rumsey Road occurred in 1957 It was during this era 1959 too that the Homes name was changed to Bloorview Hospital Home and School Four years later that would be shortened to Bloorview Childrens Hospital

It was during this era that the hospitals reputation as a teaching facility grew With its emphasis on habilitation for every child the residents underwent medical physical and psychological examinations to better determine how medical staff could improve the lives of these children Practical onsite training at this facility became a standard for both the University of Torontos Combined Course in Physiotherapy as well as Occupational Therapy The Nightingale School of Nursing also attended classes at Bloorview every year

To help address concerns about the larger social needs of these children the Hospital hired its first social service worker to start working with children and families As well the appointment of a Urologist and Orthopedic Surgeon meant more treatment could be offered onsite rather than outpatient visits to acute care hospitals More significantly as the sixties drew to a close the Hospital identified a parcel of land on Sheppard Avenue east of Leslie on Buchan Court that would become the new location for Bloorview Childrens Hospital in 1975

This new facility continued to expand the range of services that Bloorview provided including a 12bed infant unit a unit for adolescents and young adults as well as education up to entry level into secondary school thanks to the ten classroom Bloorview School adjoining the facility

By this time the Hospital was gaining recognition as one of the primary facilities of its kind in Canada As its reputation grew so too did its program mix Come the 1980s the Hospital initiated a Respite Care Program allowing parents who cared for their children at home a muchneeded break from their duties on occasion Along the same lines independence training and life skills programs that focused on preparing residents for community living were developed The Bloorview Nursery School opened in 1982 successfully integrating Bloorview preschoolers with ablebodied children from the community

During the mid80s the Ontario Crippled Childrens Centre was renamed the Hugh MacMillan Medical Centre after its first administrator whose determination to deal with his own disability in a progressive way was an inspiration to all the parents and children who entered the facility It was this Centre which would for a few years be called the Hugh MacMillan Rehabilitation Centre that would eventually amalgamate with Bloorview Childrens Hospital to become the Bloorview MacMillan Centre the name of the facility before the renaming of the current Bloorview Kids Rehab

Of course a number of other facilities and organizations have also contributed both directly and indirectly to what Bloorview has become today These include The Easter Seal Society The Variety Childrens Charity and The Christie Street Hospital

Over the past generation what is now Bloorview Kids Rehab has continued to foster its mandate of providing the most comprehensive services to children with disabilities and complex health needs and their families The growth and influence of the facility to this point has been remarkable as remarkable as the countless successes that have emerged in step with Bloorviews evolution As Bloorview looks ahead to the next hundred years the prospects of enabling and improving the lives of many will continue to be told quite certainly one story at a time
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