Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Rogers Heart Research Centre Created With $239m In Funding From Family, Hospitals

The Canadian Press , 20 Nov, 2014 10:59 AM
    TORONTO — The family of late media mogul Ted Rogers has donated $130 million to help fund a Toronto-based medical research centre in his name.
     
    The Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research is also being supported with $139 million from three participating institutions — the Hospital for Sick Children, University Health Network and the University of Toronto.
     
    Dr. Michael Apkon, president and CEO of Sick Kids, says Rogers' personal experience with heart disease and his interest in finding new therapies to advance heart health make the centre a fitting legacy.
     
    Rogers was being treated for a heart condition when he died in 2008 at age 75.
     
    The centre will bring together research, education and innovation in individualized genomic medicine, stem cell research, bioengineering, and cardiovascular treatment and management.
     
    Its goal is to improve heart health across the entire life span, from childhood through adulthood.
     
    The centre will also establish an innovation fund to drive discovery and development of next-generation therapies for heart failure. Managing the care of moderate and severe heart failure patients costs Canada's health-care system as much as $2.3 billion a year.
     
    "Today, one million Canadians are living with heart failure, and that number is projected to increase 25 per cent over the next 20 years," Dr. Barry Rubin, program medical director of UHN's Peter Munk Cardiac Centre, said in a statement Thursday.
     
    "This unprecedented gift will enable physicians and scientists working together in the Ted Rogers Centre for Heart Research to develop new therapies that will dramatically improve the lives of patients with heart disease," said Rubin, noting that one of the centre's primary goals is to cut in half the number of hospitalizations for heart failure in the next decade.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    MPs to debate bill that would bring back long census Conservatives axed

    MPs to debate bill that would bring back long census Conservatives axed
    OTTAWA — The Commons will debate a private member's bill to bring back the long-form census, the mandatory questionnaire axed by the Conservative government in 2010.

    MPs to debate bill that would bring back long census Conservatives axed

    Senate approves Conservative government's controversial prostitution bill

    Senate approves Conservative government's controversial prostitution bill
    OTTAWA — The Conservative government's controversial anti-prostitution bill passed third reading in the Senate on Tuesday and requires only royal assent to become law.

    Senate approves Conservative government's controversial prostitution bill

    Agriculture minister disappointed group wants to continue wheat board lawsuit

    Agriculture minister disappointed group wants to continue wheat board lawsuit
    OTTAWA — Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz says he is disappointed a farm group wants to take its multibillion-dollar lawsuit against Ottawa over the Canadian Wheat Board to the Supreme Court.

    Agriculture minister disappointed group wants to continue wheat board lawsuit

    Stuckless guilty of 2 counts of gross indecency;acquitted on 2 counts of buggery

    Stuckless guilty of 2 counts of gross indecency;acquitted on 2 counts of buggery
    TORONTO — Months after pleading guilty to 100 charges related to the sexual abuse of 18 boys, the man at the centre of the Maple Leaf Gardens sex scandal has been convicted in two more charges linked to two of those victims.  

    Stuckless guilty of 2 counts of gross indecency;acquitted on 2 counts of buggery

    Even Canadian oil could be affected: A look at wide-ranging U.S. midterm results

    Even Canadian oil could be affected: A look at wide-ranging U.S. midterm results
    WASHINGTON — It didn't take the Canadian government long to note the far-reaching policy implications of the Republican wave in Tuesday's midterm U.S. elections.

    Even Canadian oil could be affected: A look at wide-ranging U.S. midterm results

    Conservatives shutting door to immigrants in polygamous, forced marriages

    Conservatives shutting door to immigrants in polygamous, forced marriages
    OTTAWA — Citizenship and Immigration Minister Chris Alexander will introduce legislation later today to ban people in polygamous and forced marriages from immigrating to Canada.

    Conservatives shutting door to immigrants in polygamous, forced marriages