Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Shannon Proudfoot
Publication Date: October 13, 2025 - 20:47
Peter Howitt, Canadian Nobel Prize winner, on building the economy through ‘creative destruction’
October 13, 2025
It was a prompt and persistent Swedish reporter who alerted Peter Howitt to the fact that he’d won the Nobel Prize for Economics, before the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences managed to reach him with the news.
The Canadian economist turned off his phone when he went to bed on Sunday night, but a reporter got through to his wife’s number right after the announcement in Sweden on Monday morning. Prof. Howitt was completely caught off guard, without a bottle of champagne in the house.
Doctors are calling on provinces to bolster addiction treatment services in response to growing opioid use among young people, a crisis they fear will escalate for decades to come if immediate action is not taken.In a Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ) editorial published Monday, physicians Shannon Charlebois and Shawn Kelly say the escalation of opioid use among youth is being overlooked. Existing addiction services, they say, are also inadequate to meet the needs of young people with opioid use disorder, or OUD.
October 27, 2025 - 00:01 | Alanna Smith | The Globe and Mail
The Alberta government is expected to introduce back-to-work legislation on Monday to force striking teachers to return to classrooms after three weeks, raising fears among labour advocates that the province will invoke the Charter’s notwithstanding clause to override workers’ rights. More than 750,000 students have been out of class since Oct. 6, after negotiations between the Alberta Teachers’ Association and the province broke down.
October 26, 2025 - 21:24 | Meera Raman | The Globe and Mail
Health Canada has for the first time approved a disease-modifying drug for Alzheimer’s disease, a watershed moment that offers hope for patients but does not guarantee that the complex and expensive intravenous therapy will be widely available in this country. The federal regulator on Friday granted a conditional authorization for lecanemab, an antibody drug that can slow the progression of the disease for some people with mild cognitive impairment or early-stage dementia owing to Alzheimer’s.
October 26, 2025 - 21:08 | Kelly Grant | The Globe and Mail
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