Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Health Officials Warn Of Possible Measles Exposure At Vancouver Airport

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jun, 2019 08:10 PM

    VANCOUVER — The BC Centre for Disease Control is warning that travellers at Vancouver's airport on Sunday may have been exposed to measles.


    The centre says a passenger with the disease had a layover at Vancouver International Airport on June 9.


    It warns passengers on an Air China flight from Beijing that arrived in Vancouver at 10:50 a.m. that day and those aboard an Air Canada flight to Regina that left at 2 p.m. may have been exposed.


    The passenger went through Canada Customs and Immigration so the centre says people in the main terminal may also be vulnerable.


    Measles is a highly infectious airborne disease and symptoms include fever, cough, runny nose, red eyes and a rash that starts centrally and spreads to the limbs.


    Passengers, crew and travellers who may have come into contact with measles are asked to check their immunization status.


    The centre says if you become ill and suspect you have measles, call your doctor and inform them so they can arrange a visit in a way that avoids infecting others in the waiting room.


    Dozens of people in British Columbia have been infected with measles this year, prompting health officials to emphasize the importance of immunizations.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.

    Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.
    About a month after a rock slide in British Columbia closed Highway 97 near Summerland, traffic is moving again on the only route along the west side of Okanagan Lake.

    Month-Long Slide Closures End On Busy Highway 97 Near Summerland, B.C.

    Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates

    Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates
    Prisoners advocates are asking a Federal Court to intervene in the case of a Dene man from northern Saskatchewan who they say has spent most of his adult life in segregation and is at risk of committing suicide.

    Saskatchewan Man Kept In Segregation For More Than 2,000 Days: Advocates

    Obama Tells Winnipeg Audience That Politics Being Driven By Passions Not Facts

    WINNIPEG — Barack Obama says there is a danger in the United States and around the world with politics being driven by passions disconnected from facts.

    Obama Tells Winnipeg Audience That Politics Being Driven By Passions Not Facts

    Search Continues For Suspect After Officers Hit By Car In Burnaby, B.C.

    RCMP are checking surveillance video as they look for a description of a driver who slammed a suspected stolen car into two police officers in a Vancouver suburb.

    Search Continues For Suspect After Officers Hit By Car In Burnaby, B.C.

    Experts Say Popular Yukon Ice Cave Seriously Unstable, Close To Collapse

    Experts say a unique, cave-like tunnel formed by a retreating Yukon glacier remains a popular tourist attraction but is no longer safe to enter and may collapse soon.

    Experts Say Popular Yukon Ice Cave Seriously Unstable, Close To Collapse

    Police Search For Driver After Crash Hurts Two Officers In Burnaby, B.C.

    The RCMP were searching for a driver who they say fled a badly damaged stolen vehicle on Monday after it crashed into a parked police cruiser and injured two officers in Burnaby, B.C.

    Police Search For Driver After Crash Hurts Two Officers In Burnaby, B.C.