How To Give

How Can You Help

How Can
You Help

Every donor is precious and priceless. Besides that warm feeling in your heart you get from supporting your new community hospital, we have a variety of options available to ensure your generosity is recognized.

Get Involved

If you would like to become involved as a volunteer, if you have questions or if you wish to contribute ideas for fundraisers, events or items, please feel free to contact us. We look forward to working with the members of this community.

Past Success Through Generosity

Past Success
Through Generosity

Your generous donations have provided:

A procedure chair to enable clinical providers to move patients into various comfortable positions for assessment and treatment

An ECG Page Writer that simplifies and streamlines workflow

An Intubating Bronchoscope to assist in situations where there is difficulty with airways for patients

A Laryngoscope monitor to assist when an intubation is required for patients with difficulty breathing

A blanket warmer for improved patient comfort

Wheelchairs for portering patients, a portable ultrasound for improved diagnosis and treatment and specialized pediatric syringe pumps

Instruments within the Otology Clinic

See what we’re currently working towards

Donate Today​

Support healthcare right here in our community with a direct donation to the Strathcona Community Hospital Foundation. This year we have focused our attention or raising $75,000 for TWO new GLIDESCOPES.

These are high-tech “video periscopes’ used when a patient can’t breathe on their own… sometimes Doctors have only seconds to place a life-saving breathing tube. When every second counts, the Glidescope can reduce intubation time by HALF! Traditional tools require a ‘straight-line’ view of the throat, the GlideScope changes the game by using a tiny, integrated camera and digital monitor to ‘see around the corner’… giving Doctors a clear HD view of the airway. This ensures life-saving tubes are placed perfectly, which is even more critical when the patient is just a child.

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