Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Flu-Monitoring Program Seeks B.C. Health Practitioners To Evaluate Illnesses

The Canadian Press, 14 Sep, 2015 01:25 PM
    VANCOUVER — The BC Centre for Disease Control says the flu season begins in a just a few weeks and more doctors and nurses must help monitor outbreaks while evaluating the quality of this year's vaccine.
     
    Health care practitioners are urged to join the Canadian Sentinel Practitioner Surveillance Network, which has sites in Alberta, Ontario and Quebec.
     
    The unique system helps track the effectiveness of tailor-made flu jabs produced annually to match changing strains of the flu virus.
     
    Dr. Danuta Skowronski of B.C.'s disease control centre hopes more doctors and nurses in the western province will agree to receive special kits to evaluate flu-like illnesses, and human responses to new vaccines.
     
    There's concern because the 2014 influenza vaccine was a poor match for the H3N2 virus that caused most of the outbreaks last fall and winter.
     
    Skowronski says that meant care facilities were hit by the highest number of flu cases in more than a decade, so the potency of new vaccines must be closely observed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly

    Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly
    OTTAWA — A federal panel given the job of recommending ways to improve health care across Canada is warning that the country's medicare system is aging badly.

    Federal Health Care Innovation Panel Finds Canada's Medicare System Aging Badly

    Homicide Unit Takes Lead In Disappearance Of Missing Winnipeg Woman

    Winnipeg police say they are at a loss to explain the disappearance of a 57-year-old woman despite an intensive six-day search.

    Homicide Unit Takes Lead In Disappearance Of Missing Winnipeg Woman

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan
    Fire evacuees from La Ronge, one of the largest communities in northern Saskatchewan, are being allowed to go home.

    Majority Of Fire Evacuees Allowed To Head Home To Northern Saskatchewan

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie
    The Independent Investigations Office says it will be up to Crown counsel to decide if an incident involving a Kamloops, B.C., RCMP officer and a fleeing suspect will result in charges against the Mountie.

    Crown To Consider If Charges Warranted Against Kamloops Mountie

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo
    LIKELY, B.C. — It's expected to be at least four days before the only road to several rural properties in the central Interior community of Likely can be reopened to single lane traffic after a significant slide.

    Collapsed Beaver Dam May Be Culprit In Damaging Slide In The Cariboo

    One Home Damaged, 15 Others Isolated By Debris In B.C.'s Cariboo Region

    One Home Damaged, 15 Others Isolated By Debris In B.C.'s Cariboo Region
    Al Richmond of the Cariboo Regional District said early Thursday evening that the slide occurred near the community of Likely, which is about half way between Kamloops and Prince George.

    One Home Damaged, 15 Others Isolated By Debris In B.C.'s Cariboo Region