Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Well Prepared To Deal With Possible Ebola Virus: Health Minister

The Canadian Press , 15 Oct, 2014 11:36 AM
  • B.C. Well Prepared To Deal With Possible Ebola Virus: Health Minister
VANCOUVER - B.C.'s health minister has assured the public that the province is prepared to deal with a case of Ebola after a second U.S. health worker tested positive for the virus.
 
Terry Lake said Wednesday the risk in B.C. is low, but provincial health authorities have in place infection control systems and procedures that were developed during the SARS outbreak in 2003 and H1N1 outbreak in 2009.
 
Lake said those standards are the same used by Medecins Sans Frontieres, or Doctors Without Border, in West Africa and the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta, Ga., which have been dealing with cases of the Ebola virus.
 
He also said he's tasked the province's health officer to confirm that hospitals are equipped to handle Ebola cases and that protocols are in place to protect health-care staff.
 
"I've asked Dr. Perry Kendall ... to make sure that we put a team together to review all the protocols in place, make sure nurses and other ally health professionals have the necessary training and equipment that is necessary to deal with any suspected case of Ebola," he said in an interview. 
 
Lake also said he's eager to learn lessons from Dallas, where two health workers contracted Ebola after helping care for a patient who died from the virus.
 
"Until we understand why those health-care workers were infected, it's hard to know how to prevent it or what lessons can be learned from that," he said.
 
Lake's statement comes after the B.C. Nurses' Union said its members aren't ready to respond to Ebola cases because they haven't been trained to protect themselves from getting the virus or to care for such patients.
 
Kendall has said his first priority is to make sure health-care workers familiarize themselves with personal protective equipment.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada Weighs Impact Of Plunging Oil Prices

Canada Weighs Impact Of Plunging Oil Prices
WASHINGTON - Canadian policy-makers are trying to gauge the wide-ranging effect of plunging oil prices —whose impact on the national economy could be felt everywhere from the loonie, to imports and exports, government revenues and consumer spending.

Canada Weighs Impact Of Plunging Oil Prices

Ethics commissoner investigates Pierre Karl Peladeau

Ethics commissoner investigates Pierre Karl Peladeau
QUEBEC - Quebec's ethics commissioner will hold an inquiry into allegations that potential Parti Quebecois leadership candidate Pierre Karl Peladeau intervened politically on the question of the future of a Montreal movie studio on which his Quebecor media company was bidding.

Ethics commissoner investigates Pierre Karl Peladeau

Manitoba receives first Canada jobs grant

Manitoba receives first Canada jobs grant
WINNIPEG - Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced the first grant under the contentious Canada Jobs Grant program is going to a Winnipeg company.

Manitoba receives first Canada jobs grant

Canada withdraws from World Health Organization meeting because it's in Moscow

Canada withdraws from World Health Organization meeting because it's in Moscow
OTTAWA - Canada is boycotting a meeting of the World Health Organization on tobacco control next week because it's being held in Moscow.

Canada withdraws from World Health Organization meeting because it's in Moscow

Canadians in West Africa should leave

Canadians in West Africa should leave
EDMONTON - The federal government wants Canadians who live in three countries in West Africa where the Ebola virus is raging to consider leaving now.

Canadians in West Africa should leave

Nova Scotia Premier Stephen Mcneil Apologizes To Former Residents Of 'Colored' Orphanage

Nova Scotia Premier Stephen Mcneil Apologizes To Former Residents Of 'Colored' Orphanage
HALIFAX - Premier Stephen McNeil apologized Friday for the abuse that former residents of the Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children suffered, acknowledging that their pleas for help went unanswered in what he described was one chapter in the province's history of systemic racism.

Nova Scotia Premier Stephen Mcneil Apologizes To Former Residents Of 'Colored' Orphanage