On September 26, Walk the BEST You Can, the innovative community event organized by McGill rehabilitation researcher Nancy Mayo, PhD and her collaborators to promote BEST (BEtter, faster, longer, STronger) walking techniques and exercises to older adults and people with mobility challenges, took place in Côte Saint-Luc’s Pierre Elliot Trudeau Park. The new Walk-BEST Exercise Structure designed by McGill University’s School of Physical & Occupational Therapy (SPOT) rehabilitation science researchers and clinicians was also unveiled.
With over 200 people in attendance, the group was able to share walking expertise and gather feedback on the exercise structure, walking technologies and assessments, and fitness activities from those who dropped by.


Nancy Mayo has been conducting research on the promotion of healthy walking in older adults and people with mobility challenges for over 10 years. Stay tuned for the next Walk the BEST You Can community event coming to a Montreal park in the spring of 2022.
Read more about the September 26 event here.
Top photo:
Nancy Mayo, PhD, Nandini Dendukuri, PhD, Adriana Venturini PT, fitness experts, Côte Saint-Luc mayor Mitchell Brownstein, and local residents gather around outdoor exercise structure.
About Nancy Mayo, PhD.
Nancy Mayo is the James McGill Professor in the Department of Medicine and the School of Physical & Occupational Therapy at McGill University (Division of Geriatrics and Division of Clinical Epidemiology). In addition, she is a Research Scientist at the McGill University Hospital Center Research Institute where she leads a research program on Function, Disability and Quality of Life for vulnerable populations. She received her BSc in Physical Therapy from Queen’s University and her MSc and PhD in Epidemiology and Biostatistics from McGill University. Recently Mayo has blended an academic career with entrepreneurship. She is President and co-founder of PhysioBiometrics Inc., a McGill start-up company committed to improving people’s ability to be the best they can be given circumstances of health, through accessible technologies helping people be active, safe, and independent. The Walk-BEST Exercise Structure and Heel2ToeTM sensor are the most recent examples of such accessible technologies. In 2020, the start up company, were the winners of the McGill Dobson Cup – Health Sciences Track, for a wearable technology to improve gait pattern, Heel2ToeTM.