We've partnered with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) to create our own original series of CBC branded graphic tees. The CBC was the first nationally-owned broadcasting company created to support and promote Canadian-made media content to a diverse and ever-changing nation, and this remains to be their mandate to the present day. All our CBC designs are inspired by vintage historical photographs of CBC crew and production tech taken throughout the country and shared by @archivesrc This tee shows a radio recording van in front of the Radio Canada building in Montréal, Québec, Canada in August, 1969. This was an exciting era for radio in Canada and throughout the world - human beings had just set foot on the moon, microprocessors were just around the corner, and car radios with 8 tracks were becoming a popular and common feature of every day vehicles. Special thanks to the @archivesrc Instagram account for making these pieces of history accessible to the public. *Special Note 👋🏽 We hand print every single graphic tee in our home studio in Toronto, Canada. To minimize waste, we only print tees once they are ordered. For this reason, it can take between 4-10 days to print, press and package a tee. But we do our very best to get orders out within 3-5 days (+ shipping times)! Shipping times depend on your location from Toronto, so the further away or the more rural the address, the longer it may take. Typically, shipping is 2-6 days within North America, and anywhere from 6-14 days worldwide. We assure you that we're real people working in a very tiny team, so please do message us at [email protected] if you have any questions and we'll get back to you as soon as we can!
The most common blood test, the complete blood count, or CBC, measures red blood cells, white blood cells, hemoglobin, hematocrit, platelets and mean corpuscular volume of the blood, according to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. This test is often used to check symptoms and diagnose a wide variety of conditions, such as anemia, infections, blood cancers, clotting problems and immune system disorders.
During your annual exam, your doctor asks how you’ve been feeling, does a brief exam, and usually orders blood work. He or she might rattle off the names of a couple of lab tests to be ordered, like a CBC (complete blood count) or CMP (comprehensive metabolic panel)—but rarely has the time to explain what exactly these
A complete blood count (CBC) is a blood test that assesses your blood components. It is used to diagnosis anemia, blood cancers, and other conditions.
We're starting a new series of infographics that show common tests performed by your clinician. The first is the Complete Blood Count or CBC. Take a look.
Canada's health minister is promising "hundreds of thousands" of seniors will receive subsidized dental work next month under the Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP), despite low sign-up rates among the dentists who are expected to provide that care.
Instead of striving to extinguish the vast Donnie Creek fire, the B.C. Wildfire Service is focused on protecting homes and infrastructure, while letting other areas burn.
When my kids were small I'd pacify myself with if only we can get to the age of 18 and yet here we are and I am not resting easy. here's why turning 18 isn't what I thought.
Last week, the Assembly of First Nations estimated that the federal government must invest $349.2 billion now to ensure First Nations have access to similar infrastructure to non-Indigenous communities by 2030. That includes $1.6 billion to address accessibilities needs, but advocates say that is the bare minimum of what needs to be done.
As events marking Holocaust Education Week get underway, students and experts tell CBC News about antisemitism young people are facing in social media spaces and the need for better education to navigate the harmful and pervasive misinformation.
With the federal government under pressure to freeze its planned increase to the carbon tax, here's a look at how the policy is supposed to work and to what extent it is effective.
Learn what a complete blood count (CBC) blood test is, what is tested, and what the results mean for your health.
The Princess of Wales announced in a video on Friday that she is undergoing preventative chemotherapy after tests done after her abdominal surgery in January revealed that cancer had been present.
Crystal MacCormac and her spouse used to be financially comfortable and were able to cover the necessities with a little left over for savings. Now, the cost of everything has skyrocketed and each trip to the grocery store is demoralizing.
Krista Biddiscombe is one of the millions of Canadians living with sleep apnea. Despite facing challenges getting a diagnosis, she says her sleep improved the moment she began treating her condition with a CPAP machine.
As thousands of hospital, school and other public sector staff gear up for Monday's strike, a look back to how we got here tells a story of workers who feel they are losing out.
Research shows that the types of microbes found in our gut, or gastrointestinal tract, could have a direct impact on our mood.
Exploring an online dating profile descriptor that remains mysterious
A woman who is acting as power of attorney for her previously healthy brother following a massive stroke says there should be more resources available to help Canadians prepare to take over for a loved one when “just in case” becomes a reality.
The prevailing thought has been that ADHD is a deficiency; something that needs to be fixed or cured. But I wasn’t buying it, writes Sandy Bourque.
Google is pausing an AI tool that creates images of people following inaccuracies in some historical depictions the model generated, the latest hiccup in the Alphabet-owned company's efforts to catch up with rivals OpenAI and Microsoft.
Unless the federal government acts now, the cost of closing the on-reserve infrastructure gap will top half a trillion dollars by 2040, the Assembly of First Nations says, joining a chorus of voices warning Ottawa is at risk of missing its targets.
"It’s not easy to imagine yourself in a position when you’ve never seen someone who looks like you in it."
Medical terms and conditions can be anxiety-provoking. I’m here with straightforward advice on symptoms, diagnoses, and treatments so you’ll be armed with tools to take charge of your health.
Exoskeletons allow workers to do some jobs faster and with less strain on their bodies. The hope is this technology will attract younger workers and allow older employees to stay on the job longer, easing the construction industry's labour shortage.
Tax season is here and with it, a new scam. The Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre says it involves a text message, containing a person's name and personal info, that appears to come from the Canada Revenue Agency. The warning comes as Ontario Provincial Police launch Anti-Fraud Prevention Month.
With many of the e-commerce platform’s best-selling goods priced under $10, it’s easy to see why many are flocking to the app to purchase everything from clothes and accessories to home appliances. But some experts caution people to think critically about using it.
From grocery lists to grandchildren, Frank De Palma and his father have found a way to connect each day despite the physical distance between them.
Scientists say an amazingly well-preserved fossil egg adds more evidence to the close links between dinosaurs and modern birds.
In the latest episode — Where is Japantown? — hosts Leah-Simone Bowen and Falen Johnson look into Japanese Canadian history and how the internment of more than twenty thousand Japanese-Canadians during the Second World War altered countless lives and split up entire communities.
Sheri McKinstry, co-founder of the Indigenous Dental Association of Canada, says it doesn't matter how much money is available for dental care if there is no one in your community offering services.
A Metro Vancouver municipality is joining wildlife conservationists in calling for more oversight of the B.C. Conservation Officer Service after a decade-high number of black bears were killed by the service's officers last year.
The pipeline between the new Professional Women's Hockey League and the women's world championship extends beyond players.
The federal government says Canada could face another destructive wildfire season, after an unusually warm winter, widespread drought conditions and a forecast of above-normal temperatures in the months ahead.
Satellite imagery and radar images from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite are being used to map the damage in the Gaza Strip. It shows that the tempo and intensity of bombing and destruction outpace anything seen so far in the 21st century, leading to a predictably high number of civilian casualties.
Here's what you need to know about the Canadian Dental Care Plan, a $13-billion insurance program that will start covering costs for most basic dentistry next year for about nine million eligible Canadians, according to the federal government.
Much has been written about the Jian Ghomeshi affair.
A growing group of Canadians is organizing a boycott of Loblaw companies for May. But it means blacklisting much more than just grocery stores.
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Complete blood count analysis is a standard procedure everytime your pet is feeling sick and you visit a veterinary clinic. Here we prepared an infographic to help you understand your pet's CBC results a little better.
According to French thinker René Girard, culture begins when people spontaneously unite against a single victim and the war of each against each becomes the unity of all against one, the principle of the scapegoat. And out of the corpse of the scapegoat victim grows the sacrificial cult which is the origin of every society. Girard's ideas influenced social scientists over his long career as a writer and teacher, until his death in the fall of 2015. In this classic IDEAS series, David Cayley explores the thought of René Girard.
The destruction of Pointe-Sainte-Anne, an Acadian Settlement in modern-day Fredericton, by the British is a somewhat forgotten piece of the capital’s history.
Cryptocurrency has been described by some observers as a "Wild West," so it's no surprise that of all Canadian provinces, Alberta is the one that has set its sights on becoming a North American hub for the maverick industry.
When Victoria neuroscientist Olav Krigolson is barraged with puppy videos all that tail-wagging cuteness offers more than just a quick jolt of joy — it may even do a little brain healing.