Northwest Integrative Healthcare Centre

Northwest Integrative Healthcare Centre Northwest Integrative Healthcare Centre is a team of healthcare professionals working together

Northwest Integrative Healthcare Centre is a team of healthcare professionals working together to promote individual and community goals for balance in health and wellness. Our team is devoted to working together with individuals to support whole healthcare that includes physical, mental, emotional and spiritual wellness. We believe that when individuals are supported in these ways, family, friend

s and community benefit. To achieve these goals, we understand that it takes more than just one healthcare professional. As it takes a community to raise a child, we believe healing requires multiple healers and a variety of perspectives. That is why at Northwest Integrative Healthcare Centre, we have a team of registered professionals to support health and wellness. In providing a comprehensive assessment, care planning and treatment coordination, we will work collaboratively with our multidisciplinary team. Important factors in our support include medical assessment, diagnoses and treatment, counselling support services and lifestyle guidance, navigation of the medical system, education and connection to specialized care resources, while facilitating individual self-empowerment. We aim to communicate effectively with patients, families, the public, the medical system and other members of our multidisciplinary team. Our philosophy is value based and is built upon the foundation that a caring and relationship-centered practice that is recovery-oriented and has an anti-oppressive focus, is fundamental towards creating individual, family, and community wellness.

Notice: Farewell. Good day NIHC friends. It is with a heavy heart that I am informing the community that as of May 1st, ...
02/14/2023

Notice: Farewell.

Good day NIHC friends.

It is with a heavy heart that I am informing the community that as of May 1st, 2023 I will no longer be a member of the NIHC team and will no longer be providing services at that location.
It’s been a great 10 years. The clinic is an amazing legacy that will continue on and bless the community. Thank you to everyone there now and in the past for your hard work and dedication, and for always being amazing people.

I will be moving to St Johns Newfoundland for a couple months in May to start my Doctoral residency, and once I return I will post the location of my new office. In the meantime, I’m available to patients up until April 30, and will be available via telehealth after I leave NIHC.

Blessings to you all, and blessings to the NIHC staff. Amazing people.

Thank you Dr. Candice Griffith for the amazing decade of work and service we have shared and experienced together. Blessing to you and your team as you push forward into new future chapters ahead.

Blessings and love.

Devin Pollitt.

09/30/2022
05/10/2022

NIHC is looking for a receptionist for the summer. Mid-June to the end of August. We welcome university students who need a flexible part-time to full-time job position that will offer meaningful experience in a medical office setting. Please bring a resume in to the clinic or email us at nihcterrace@gmail.com. We appreciate shares for this post to find the right person for our friendly working environment ☀️😁

NIHC is happy to share that we have a new addition to our healing team.  Allyson Vollmer has been a Registered Massage T...
01/03/2022

NIHC is happy to share that we have a new addition to our healing team. Allyson Vollmer has been a Registered Massage Therapist since 2014. She completed her training in Ontario at the Canadian College of Massage and Hydrotherapy. She enjoys refreshing and deepening her understanding of anatomy, physiology, pain science, and osteopathic techniques like cranial sacral therapy. She aims to apply this knowledge to her massage sessions. Every massage is tailored to the needs of each individual. Allyson understands the importance of rest and aims to provide a safe space for people to relax.
At this time, Allyson is accepting new patients and you can call the clinic to book in with her. 250-635-0980.
NIHC does direct billing for all of the major extended medical providers.

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NIHC is so grateful to be welcoming Cynthia McCreery to our team! She is offering Expressive Arts Therapy on Saturdays a...
10/08/2021

NIHC is so grateful to be welcoming Cynthia McCreery to our team! She is offering Expressive Arts Therapy on Saturdays and you can explore more of who she is here.
https://littlecityartstherapy.ca/

06/10/2021

Hey everybody! Our beloved Jane Claudio is going back through cancer that has returned. B… Mitch Marczewski needs your support for Janes Cancer Treatment Fund

We have updated the sign welcoming our patients and clients to the clinic ❤️ This sign lists all of our current modaliti...
05/31/2021

We have updated the sign welcoming our patients and clients to the clinic ❤️ This sign lists all of our current modalities. Next will be the window as it still details services we don’t offer. Small changes come one at a time 😉

03/31/2021

A statement closes the mind; a question opens it.

An article about the complicated treatment of post concussion syndrome and, as in this case, the close links to PTSD.htt...
02/11/2021

An article about the complicated treatment of post concussion syndrome and, as in this case, the close links to PTSD.

https://www.outsideonline.com/2420414/helicopter-crash-invisible-scars?utm_source=facebook&utm_campaign=facebookpost&utm_medium=social

Ten years ago, heli-ski guide Erin Tierney survived a helicopter crash and began a relentless journey of healing and recovery. Battling injuries invisible to the naked eye, she fought to reframe and regain her hold on the life she loved.

NIHC is grateful for our opportunity to welcome a new Naturopathic Physician to our clinic, Dr Danielle Partington, B.Sc...
02/11/2021

NIHC is grateful for our opportunity to welcome a new Naturopathic Physician to our clinic, Dr Danielle Partington, B.Sc., N.D. She offers primary family healthcare that is evidence based, naturally focused & patient centered.

As a Naturopathic Physician, Dr. Partington takes an holistic approach to health care, striving to get to the root cause of your health concerns in order to optimize health & well being. Dr. Partington recognizes that health and healing are unique to each person. Therefore, she employs a wide range of diagnostics & recommends naturopathic treatments that are highly individualized. She strives to treat the underlying cause of disease and, together with her patients, create a comprehensive treatment plan to help each patient reach their individual health goals & empower them to live their best life.
Dr. Partington uses a variety of Naturopathic modalities alongside conventional medicine to provide patients with the ideal individualized care to support them on their journey to better physical, mental, emotional & spiritual wellbeing. These modalities include botanical medicine, clinical nutrition, acupuncture, homeopathy, IV nutrient therapy, lifestyle counselling and the use of pharmaceutical medications when necessary. As a primary care practitioner, Dr. Partington holds a general practice and welcomes any health concerns.
If you would like to book an initial appointment with her or ask any questions, please call us at 250-635-0980.
NIHC offers direct billing to most extended medical companies.

12/12/2020

Update:

We are pleased to announce that we are now an approved counselling provider for Veterans Affairs Canada, and we can also do direct billing for this service through Medavie.

It is an honour to be able to provide a valuable service to our Veterans. Thank you for keeping us all safe by defending our freedoms.

Happy weekend everyone.

12/11/2020

Since the dawn of time, we have searched for ways to make life easier for us. The modern age has given us some amazing technological advances—what we would do without the internet, our iPhones or high-speed travel?

For many people, surviving life without these things sounds rough. However, if you have diabetes, no doubt you’re also a big fan of one particular 20th-century discovery: insulin.

Before insulin was discovered in 1921, people with diabetes didn’t live for long; there wasn’t much doctors could do for them. The most effective treatment was to put patients with diabetes on very strict diets with minimal carbohydrate intake. This could buy patients a few extra years but couldn’t save them. Harsh diets (some prescribed as little as 450 calories a day!) sometimes even caused patients to die of starvation.

So how did this wonderful breakthrough blossom? Let’s travel back a little more than 100 years ago.…

In 1889, two German researchers, Oskar Minkowski and Joseph von Mering, found that when the pancreas gland was removed from dogs, the animals developed symptoms of diabetes and died soon afterward. This led to the idea that the pancreas was the site where “pancreatic substances” (insulin) were produced.

Later experimenters narrowed this search to the islets of Langerhans (a fancy name for clusters of specialized cells in the pancreas). In 1910, Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Shafer suggested only one chemical was missing from the pancreas in people with diabetes. He decided to call this chemical insulin, which comes for the Latin word insula, meaning “island.”

So what happened next? Something truly miraculous. In 1921, a young surgeon named Frederick Banting and his assistant Charles Best figured out how to remove insulin from a dog’s pancreas. Skeptical colleagues said the stuff looked like “thick brown muck,” but little did they know this would lead to life and hope for millions of people with diabetes.

With this murky concoction, Banting and Best kept another dog with severe diabetes alive for 70 days—the dog died only when there was no more extract. With this success, the researchers, along with the help of colleagues J.B. Collip and John Macleod, went a step further. A more refined and pure form of insulin was developed, this time from the pancreases of cattle.

In January 1922, Leonard Thompson, a 14-year-old boy dying from diabetes in a Toronto hospital, became the first person to receive an injection of insulin. Within 24 hours, Leonard’s dangerously high blood glucose levels dropped to near-normal levels.

The news about insulin spread around the world like wildfire. In 1923, Banting and Macleod received the Nobel Prize in Medicine, which they shared with Best and Collip. Thank you, diabetes researchers!

Soon after, the medical firm Eli Lilly started large-scale production of insulin. It wasn’t long before there was enough insulin to supply the entire North American continent. In the decades to follow, manufacturers developed a variety of slower-acting insulins, the first introduced by Novo Nordisk Pharmaceuticals, Inc., in 1936.

Insulin from cattle and pigs was used for many years to treat diabetes and saved millions of lives, but it wasn’t perfect, as it caused allergic reactions in many patients. The first genetically engineered, synthetic “human” insulin was produced in 1978 using E. coli bacteria to produce the insulin. Eli Lilly went on in 1982 to sell the first commercially available biosynthetic human insulin under the brand name Humulin.

Insulin now comes in many forms, from regular human insulin identical to what the body produces on its own, to ultra-rapid and ultra-long acting insulins. Thanks to decades of research, people with diabetes can choose from a variety of formulas and ways to take their insulin based on their personal needs and lifestyles. From Humalog to Novolog and insulin pens to pumps, insulin has come a long way. It may not be a cure for diabetes, but it’s literally a life saver.

So, what’s next for insulin? Scientists aren’t sure (though they’re working hard on it!), but one thing is certain: insulin is a medical marvel in the world of diabetes.

American Diabetes Association.

For more interesting information about insulin, we suggest reading The Discovery of Insulin by Michael Bliss.

Just in case you needed a nudge to get back into a creative activity... ❣️
12/02/2020

Just in case you needed a nudge to get back into a creative activity... ❣️

Art touches us emotionally and engages us intellectually, creating a reaction and a response. Science shows that art is important for our mental and physical wellbeing.

Tap into your natural ‘flow state’ and create to reduce stress ❣️❣️❣️
11/14/2020

Tap into your natural ‘flow state’ and create to reduce stress ❣️❣️❣️

Use your creativity to relieve stress — and show people how much your really care

Address

Terrace, BC

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+12506350980

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