Dionne quintuplets
The Dionne quintuplets (; born May 28, 1934) are the first quintuplets known to have survived their infancy. The identical girls were born just outside Callander, Ontario, near the village of Corbeil. All five survived to adulthood.The Dionne girls were born premature. After four months with their family, custody was signed over to the Red Cross, which paid for their care and oversaw the building of a hospital for the sisters. Less than a year after this agreement was signed, the Ontario government stepped in and passed the ''Dionne Quintuplets' Guardianship Act, 1935'', which made them wards of the Crown until the age of 18. The Ontario provincial government and those around them began to profit by making them a significant tourist attraction.
The identical quintuplet girls were, in order of birth: # Yvonne Édouilda Marie Dionne (died 2001) # Annette Lillianne Marie Allard (living) # Cécile Marie Émilda Langlois (living) # Émilie Marie Jeanne Dionne (died 1954) # Marie Reine Alma Houle (died 1970) Provided by Wikipedia
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Primary Care Transformation During a Pandemic by Nancy Côté, Andrew Freeman, Jean-Louis Denis, Dave Laverdière, Émilie Dionne, Marie-Pierre Gagnon, Matthew Menear
Published 2023-03-01
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Primary Care Transformation During a Pandemic: Rapid Reforms Focused on Outreach Approaches and Intersectoral Collaboration to Better Serve Vulnerable Populations by Nancy Côté, Andrew Freeman, Jean-Louis Denis, Dave Laverdière, Émilie Dionne, Marie-Pierre Gagnon, Matthew Menear
Published 2023-03-01
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Typology of organizational innovation components: building blocks to improve access to primary healthcare for vulnerable populations by Mélanie Ann Smithman, Sarah Descôteaux, Émilie Dionne, Lauralie Richard, Mylaine Breton, Vladimir Khanassov, Jeannie L. Haggerty, On behalf of the IMPACT research team
Published 2020-10-01
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Programmes to support transitions in care for children and youth with complex care needs and their families: a scoping review protocol by Shelley Doucet, Émilie Dionne, Rima Azar, Alison Luke, Janet A Curran, Sydney Breneol, Amy E Reid, Shelley McKibbon, Amanda R Horsman, Krystal Binns
Published 2020-06-01
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Improving access to primary health care: a cross-case comparison based on an a priori program theory by Catherine Spooner, Virginia Lewis, Cathie Scott, Simone Dahrouge, Jeannie Haggerty, Grant Russell, Jean-Frederic Levesque, Emilie Dionne, Nigel Stocks, Mark F. Harris, IMPACT team
Published 2021-10-01
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