Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Four children with strep A have died in B.C. in the past month, disease centre says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2024 04:01 PM
  • Four children with strep A have died in B.C. in the past month, disease centre says

Four children under the age of 10 who had streptococcal infections have died since mid-December, in what the BC Centre for Disease Control says is part of a surge in such infections. 

A bulletin released by the centre, the Provincial Health Services Authority and BC Children's Hospital says data from 2023 show a three-fold increase in invasive group A streptococcal infections in people under 20. 

It says there were 60 cases last year, three times as many as the year before, when five deaths were reported in children under 10 for the whole year. 

In all four recent deaths the centre says the children also had the flu or other viruses alongside the strep infection.

While the bacterial that causes the infection typically causes mild infections, it can become more dangerous when the bacteria invades the lungs, the blood or spreads along muscle tissue. 

The centre and BC Children's Hospital says families need to be aware of symptoms of fever lasting for more than five days for children of any age, a rash, swollen tongue, struggling to breathe or a child who becomes very sick, very quickly. 

Three of the deaths were previously reported to have occurred in December and were said to have been linked to the flu.

MORE National ARTICLES

Liberal, NDP MPs head to Jordan, West Bank to ask Palestinians how to advance peace

Liberal, NDP MPs head to Jordan, West Bank to ask Palestinians how to advance peace
Five members of Parliament are in the Middle East to hear from Palestinians about how Canada can best push for peace and human rights in the region. The group Canadian-Muslim Vote is paying for the Liberal and NDP MPs to visit the region for six days, alongside humanitarian groups.  

Liberal, NDP MPs head to Jordan, West Bank to ask Palestinians how to advance peace

High power demand due to cold snap: BC Hydro

High power demand due to cold snap: BC Hydro
BC Hydro says the extreme cold temperatures saw the province experience a record-high power demand. The public utility says in a statement it reached record demand highs on Friday night of eleven thousand three hundred megawatts.  

High power demand due to cold snap: BC Hydro

Canadians in several provinces to receive carbon price rebates today

Canadians in several provinces to receive carbon price rebates today
Canadians living in provinces where the federal carbon price is collected are expected to receive their first Climate Action Incentive rebate of the year today. The federal government says people living in provinces including Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Ontario, and Saskatchewan will receive the rebate through direct bank deposit or by cheque if they have filed their income tax and benefit returns.

Canadians in several provinces to receive carbon price rebates today

Snowflurries in Vancouver on Tuesday

Snowflurries in Vancouver on Tuesday
Environment Canada says the forecast calls for snowflurries in the Metro Vancouver area by Tuesday, followed by rain later this week. Temperatures are still forecast to remain well below zero Celsius in the province's northeast and Kootenay regions.

Snowflurries in Vancouver on Tuesday

Record cold in Western Canada across B.C., Alberta

Record cold in Western Canada across B.C., Alberta
In British Columbia, rescue crews say two skiers are lucky to be alive after they became lost in the Fitzsimmons Creek area near Whistler late Thursday as wind chill dipped around -50 C. North Shore Rescue says on social media that a helicopter was used to hoist out the pair who were hypothermic with frozen feet, and it's "unlikely the skiers would have survived the night."

Record cold in Western Canada across B.C., Alberta

Phone lines not meant for refund complaints: Coquitlam RCMP

Phone lines not meant for refund complaints: Coquitlam RCMP
Mounties in Coquitlam are reminding the public that its emergency and non-emergency lines are not meant for complaints about things like a cold fast-food burger. Police say that was one of many calls they had to 9-1-1 that take away staff time from helping someone with a life-threatening situation.   

Phone lines not meant for refund complaints: Coquitlam RCMP