Everyday Heroes Kids

Everyday Heroes Kids Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Everyday Heroes Kids, Medical and health, Biomedical Zone/209 Victoria Street, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, Toronto, ON.

Everyday Heroes Kids connects families with pediatric professionals, organizations and technologies in health, mental health and education with the goal of saving time and stress and encouraging earlier intervention for better outcomes in kids.

Happy   ⚽️ 🧸 🛻 📖 🌳
06/11/2026

Happy ⚽️ 🧸 🛻 📖 🌳

We’re rebuilding Everyday Heroes Kids 💛We originally set out to create a trusted space where families can easily find pe...
04/28/2026

We’re rebuilding Everyday Heroes Kids 💛
We originally set out to create a trusted space where families can easily find pediatric support, resources, and professionals without the stress and overwhelm.
That mission hasn’t changed. What’s evolving is how we deliver it.
Everyday Heroes Kids is now being rebuilt with new technology and AI to better support families and the professionals who care for them.
Our focus remains the same: helping families access the right care, reduce stress, and encourage earlier intervention for better outcomes.
We’re excited for what’s ahead and what this next chapter will make possible.
More to come soon....Re-Launching Spring 2026!!

EXCITING ANNOUNCEMENT: We’re rebuilding Everyday Heroes Kids 💛We originally set out to create a trusted space where fami...
04/25/2026

EXCITING ANNOUNCEMENT: We’re rebuilding Everyday Heroes Kids 💛
We originally set out to create a trusted space where families can easily find pediatric support, resources, and professionals without the stress and overwhelm.
That mission hasn’t changed. What’s evolving is how we deliver it.
Everyday Heroes Kids is now being rebuilt with new technology and AI to better support families and the professionals who care for them.
Our focus remains the same: helping families access the right care, reduce stress, and encourage earlier intervention for better outcomes.
We’re excited for what’s ahead and what this next chapter will make possible.
More to come soon....
Canada
healthcare accesstocare Canada paediatrics

Healthcare leaders often ask a simple question: What’s the ROI?When researchers look at Child Life programs through that...
03/20/2026

Healthcare leaders often ask a simple question: What’s the ROI?

When researchers look at Child Life programs through that lens, the numbers are compelling.

Studies have shown that Child Life interventions can:

• Reduce the need for anesthesia during pediatric procedures
• Shorten procedure times and improve clinical throughput
• Reduce length of stay
• Improve patient and caregiver satisfaction
• Support better adherence and fewer return visits

In some high-volume pediatric settings, these improvements can translate into hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual savings.

So yes — there is a financial argument for Child Life.

But that argument is incomplete.

Healthcare organizations talk constantly about patient experience, community relationships, and building trust with families. In pediatric care specifically, that trust is harder to earn and easier to lose than almost anywhere else.

Child Life specialists do that work every single day.

They sit with frightened children before procedures.
They help families understand what’s happening.
They turn a confusing medical encounter into something that feels human.

Years later, children may not remember the clinical details of their hospital stay.

But they remember the person who helped them feel safe.

Parents remember the professional who took the time to comfort their child.

Those moments matter.

You can measure anesthesia costs.
You can measure throughput.

But the trust built in those moments is far harder to put on a spreadsheet — and may prove to be the most valuable return of all.

Happy Child Life Month to the incredible Certified Child Life Specialists who help put the care into healthcare every day. Reposted from Tim Jones, Health Nuts Media

Happy
03/09/2026

Happy

🧠✨ ECHO at UHN: Pediatric TBI SeriesJoin us March 4 – April 22, 2026 for a FREE, CPD‑accredited virtual program supporti...
02/20/2026

🧠✨ ECHO at UHN: Pediatric TBI Series
Join us March 4 – April 22, 2026 for a FREE, CPD‑accredited virtual program supporting clinicians who care for children and youth with TBI.
📅 Wednesdays • 5–6 PM EST
💬 Open to all healthcare providers
💡 Concussion care, infant/toddler TBI, moderate–severe TBI, return‑to‑school/play & Rowan’s Law protections [TBI Pediat...yer - 2026 | PDF]
🔗 Register: www.surveymonkey.com/r/TBIPediatric2026
Educate • Engage • Empower ✨

Exciting update from the Psychosocial Oncology Lab at the University of Ottawa has officially started with lots of succe...
01/22/2026

Exciting update from the Psychosocial Oncology Lab at the University of Ottawa has officially started with lots of success!! They have also recently enrolled their second group of parents and are preparing for the beginning of their sessions. Their lab is still hoping to recruit 2 more groups to participate in their study and improve supports for cancer parents across Canada. If our followers could please share the study across your networks, we would greatly appreciate your help! .uottawa 💛

It’s so sad to see how technology is impacting childhood. Kids need to be outside, riding bikes, socializing and off the...
10/22/2025

It’s so sad to see how technology is impacting childhood. Kids need to be outside, riding bikes, socializing and off their phones.

The Psychosocial Oncology Lab at the University of Ottawa is looking for Canadian parents/caregivers of a childhood canc...
09/23/2025

The Psychosocial Oncology Lab at the University of Ottawa is looking for Canadian parents/caregivers of a childhood cancer survivor to participate in this 7-week, online group intervention co-designed with parents to help them manage their fear of cancer recurrence. The Psychosocial Oncology Lab at the University of Ottawa, under the supervision of Dr. Sophie Lebel, explores the challenges associated with cancer survivorship and develop evidence-based interventions to address them.

Maria Montessori, strongly believed that an adult’s pace of life is not the natural pace of childhood, and too often, ch...
10/18/2024

Maria Montessori, strongly believed that an adult’s pace of life is not the natural pace of childhood, and too often, children are expected to speed up rather than have the adults around them slow down.

In her book, The Secret of Childhood, Montessori’s describes the behavior of elephants (1936).
She marveled at how they instinctively slow the whole herd down to the pace of its youngest members.
We would do well to think about the speed of human development and unfolding.

Address

Biomedical Zone/209 Victoria Street, Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute
Toronto, ON
M5B1T8

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