Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Enterovirus D68 Linked To B.C. Death Of Child Under The Age Of Five

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jan, 2015 03:08 PM
    VANCOUVER — The death of a B.C. child has become the third fatality in the province linked to the enterovirus D68 infection.
     
    Dr. Danuta Skowronski (skov-ron-ski) of the B.C. Centre for Disease Control says the child was under the age of five when it died in November and the agency was notified last week.
     
    Skowronski says tests confirmed the presence of the respiratory virus, but experts can't say for certain whether it caused or how it contributed to the death.
     
    She says she can't reveal the child's gender or age because of privacy issues.
     
    The deaths of an elderly person and young adult have also been associated with the virus, and Skowronski says the patients had multiple underlying medical conditions or asthma. 
     
    She says most of those infected with enterovirus D68 have what appear to be symptoms of a common cold: sneezing, runny nose, a cough, and some have no symptoms at all.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Arrested In Hit-and-run Death Of B.C. Cyclist Whose Wife Found Body In Ditch

    Man Arrested In Hit-and-run Death Of B.C. Cyclist Whose Wife Found Body In Ditch
    COMOX, B.C. — A man has been arrested in the hit-and-run death of a cyclist whose body was found in a ditch after he was reported missing in Comox, B.C.

    Man Arrested In Hit-and-run Death Of B.C. Cyclist Whose Wife Found Body In Ditch

    Dispute Between Christian University, B.C. Law Society Now Court Bound

    Dispute Between Christian University, B.C. Law Society Now Court Bound
    VANCOUVER — A Christian university in British Columbia is taking the debate between religious freedoms and same-sex equality rights into the province's courts.

    Dispute Between Christian University, B.C. Law Society Now Court Bound

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers
    VANCOUVER — The federal government has announced new details about its plans to auction off wireless spectrum as it attempts to entice new mobile carriers to enter the market and bring down prices for cellular phone users.

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver-area city is asking the National Energy Board to hand Kinder Morgan a bill that could be worth more than $2 million for policing and cleanup costs after pipeline work was targeted by protesters last month.

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades
    VICTORIA — Residents of Metro Vancouver will be asked to agree to pay an extra 0.5 per cent sales tax after the province approved a plebiscite on funding major upgrades to the regional transportation network.

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates
    VICTORIA — British Columbia needs to appoint a crime-fighting boss who can cut through provincial, municipal and social bureaucracies to build unified crime-prevention teams, say government reports released Thursday.

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates