Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 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

    Manitoba To Become First Province To Formally Apologize To Aboriginal Adoptees

    Manitoba To Become First Province To Formally Apologize To Aboriginal Adoptees
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba is set to become the first province to formally apologize to aboriginal adoptees today.

    Manitoba To Become First Province To Formally Apologize To Aboriginal Adoptees

    B.C. Government To Review Spreading Of Treated Human Waste In Nicola Valley

    B.C. Government To Review Spreading Of Treated Human Waste In Nicola Valley
    MERRITT, B.C. — The B.C. government has announced it will conduct a scientific review of biosolids, or treated human waste, that is being spread across parts of the Nicola Valley.

    B.C. Government To Review Spreading Of Treated Human Waste In Nicola Valley

    Appeal Hearing Granted For B.C. Man Convicted In Teen's 2011 Halloween Death

    Appeal Hearing Granted For B.C. Man Convicted In Teen's 2011 Halloween Death
    Twenty-nine-year-old Matthew Foerster was convicted of first-degree murder in April last year and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

    Appeal Hearing Granted For B.C. Man Convicted In Teen's 2011 Halloween Death

    Confession In Toddler's Death Unreliable: Victoria Judge After Not-guilty Guilt

    Confession In Toddler's Death Unreliable: Victoria Judge After Not-guilty Guilt
    VICTORIA — A 31-year-old Victoria man has been found not guilty of second-degree murder in the April 2008 death of a toddler in his care.

    Confession In Toddler's Death Unreliable: Victoria Judge After Not-guilty Guilt

    Sex Allegations Against Sen. Don Meredith Referred Top Ethics Officer

    Sex Allegations Against Sen. Don Meredith Referred Top Ethics Officer
    OTTAWA — The battered Senate was reeling from yet another body blow Thursday as published allegations that Sen. Don Meredith was having a sexual relationship with a 16-year-old girl were referred to the Senate ethics officer.

    Sex Allegations Against Sen. Don Meredith Referred Top Ethics Officer

    Pediatricians Urged To Be On The Lookout For Eating Disorder Among Young Kids

    Pediatricians Urged To Be On The Lookout For Eating Disorder Among Young Kids
    TORONTO — Family doctors and pediatricians should be on the lookout for a poorly understood eating disorder in which children severely restrict the types of foods they will eat, a pair of eating disorder experts say.

    Pediatricians Urged To Be On The Lookout For Eating Disorder Among Young Kids