• Maison Casagiu & Co
  • GENEVA ENGLISH SCHOOL Virtual Open Event - Friday, 15 November 2024
  • Airbnb Geneva - Your home away from home
  • International Institute in Geneva
  • Scherenschnitte - Swiss Decoupage Art and more

physiotherapy

The physiotherapy practice, Physio Sport Acacias, has recently expanded the range of services it offers clients by taking on a registered massage therapist at its practice in Les Acacias.

Operating out of the popular fitness center, The Fitness by California Acacias, the new massage therapist,  Katrin Balmain-Jeanrenaud, will offer a series of massage therapies that will complement the physiotherapy services already offered by practice founder, Alexis Romanens, and his colleague, Sebastien Weil.

Katrin told knowitall.ch, “We are passionate about addressing our patient’s fitness needs and giving all the support we can for them to maintain a healthy and balanced lifestyle.  The huge benefit of our practice is that we are based at the gym, so we have access to state-of-the-art equipment whenever necessary.  Our approach is highly supportive and personalized, and we all speak English.”

Katrin offers many different kinds of massage, each adapted to the specific needs of her clients.  Her sports massages are designed to help clients "be prepared", thereby increasing their performance levels and reducing their risk of injury. They will also help clients recuperate by eliminating toxins and metabolic waste, and relieving cramps and sore muscles.

phsiodynamis1

Since it was founded in September last year, the Nyon-based health service provider, Physiodynamis, has gone from strength to strength. So successful has the new company been, that it will move into new, purpose-built premises in Nyon later this year, enabling it to offer a wider range of physio and perinatal services such as workshops and classes for larger groups of clients.

Founded by Céline and Thomas Payot, Physiodynamis offers massage, osteopathy, and reflexology services, as well as specific proprioception services, athletic consulting, and nordic walking outings for pregnant women. For those clients looking for more support both during pregancy and after birth, the organization also offers the invaluable services of a doula. Visit the website at www.physiodynamis.ch to see the full range of services provided.

Celine told knowitall.ch, "Our goal is to support clients whenever needed, encouraging them to become more automonous and responsible for their own health. We work with people with all kinds of life styles and are committed to helping clients evolve on their own path of wellbeing, be that the improvement of their overall shape, fitness, strength or confidence."

cancercalendar 2013

One of Know-it-all passport's biggest fans, local mom, Nicole Scobie, has just launched her own battle against cancer by producing a new wall calendar for 2013, designed to raise money for children with cancer.  All profits from sales of the calendar, which is priced at just Fr. 20.- (plus Fr. 2.- for postage), will go directly to two Swiss charities who work closely with families affected by childhood cancer: Force Fondation (www.forcefondation.ch) and ARFEC (www.arfec.ch).

The idea for the new wall calendar came a year after Nicole's own 5 year old son, Elliot, was diagnosed with cancer. Living away from her home country, Canada, and all the hands-on support one would normally expect from close relatives, Nicole's family began on a long, difficult journey, which saw Elliot spend much of his time in hospital, in the company of many other children, also bravely fighting the same battle.

Nicole told us, “Elliot was diagnosed with cancer of the kidney just over a year ago when he was 4 years old.  We discovered the cancer one morning after Elliot's bath, I noticed a lump on his stomach and my instincts told me to bring him right away to our pediatrician in Rolle. She sent us to the Nyon hopsital for an ultrasound, which showed a 15cm tumour on his kidney, and we were then transferred to CHUV in Lausanne. After an intense year of treatment including chemotherapy, surgery to remove his kidney as well as the main tumour, and radiotherapy, we have now been told that he is in remission. His treatment finished on 2 July.”

askarticlepic

Come along to the Crown Plaza Hotel this Saturday, between 9h30 and 15h00

During the past decade both local and international schools in Geneva have had to cope with an ever-increasing number of children with special needs. Parents and teachers are often finding themselves at a loss and may not know who to turn to or what services are available.

ASK-All Special Kids, a non-profit voluntary organisation that helps parents across the whole spectrum of families of children with special educational needs or learning difficulties, is now trying to fill this gap. ASK encourages collaboration between parents, educators and specialists and makes sure people get the information they need when they need it so that children with special needs can play an inclusive role in our society.

On the 6th of October ASK will be hosting a conference by experts in their field, who will explain how the local system provides support for children who are identified as having special needs at any period of their school life, including pre-school. Stands with information on further resources and other parent support organisations will be present at the conference. Workshops looking at sensory level assessment and the “First Step” method will also be provided.

tara volunteers

La Maison de Tara, which featured on our website last year, is a hospice that offers an altermative to hopitalisation for people at the very end of their life.  At the hospice, volunteers are not an 'add on' but are at the very heart of the hospice's activities and without themit simply could not exist.  Following the success of its first training course, a second training course for English-speaking volunteers will begin in October this year. The course will be held one Saturday per month over a period of a year (see exact dates below).    

On the course, volunteers will receive over 100 hours of training in basic knowledge, practical knowhow and 'how to be' with themselves, with residents and their families.  Training is given by in-house and external people with deep experience of their subject.  Course organizer, Daphne Fresle, told knowitall.ch, "Learning "how to be" is probably of the greatest importance in volunteers' support of patient, family and friends.  What matters most is how we are more than what we say or do."

The training programme starts with modules on learning "how to be": the capacity to care emotionally and spiritually for patients, their families and loved ones.  Further modules cover infectious disease, hygiene, patient transfer, manipulation of wheelchairs and beds, patient positioning and relaxing massage.  Finally there are modules on palliative care, covering:  illness, the ageing process, pain control, the death process, experiencing grief and ethics.