Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mexican Soccer Player Pulled From Pan Am Team After Catching Chickenpox

The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2015 01:37 PM
    TORONTO — Mexican soccer officials say a player has been pulled from their women's team at the Pan Am Games after contracting chickenpox.
     
    The Mexican Football Federation says Veronica Charlyn Corral Ang started showing symptoms such as fever and lesions on July 6 and alerted sports authorities.
     
    Tests conducted at the athletes village medical clinic in Toronto confirmed Wednesday that she had chickenpox.
     
    The Games' organizing committee says a foreign athlete contracted the varicella virus before arriving in Canada and is being treated.
     
    Spokesman Teddy Katz says the athlete is in "self isolation" until the contagious period ends on July 12.
     
    He says the athlete's teammates are also being assessed but the majority have been vaccinated or have already had chickenpox and are not considered susceptible.
     
    Katz said Games officials are working with public health officials to manage and monitor the situation.
     
    The Mexican Football Federation said Ang is being replaced by Nancy Guadalupe Antonio Lopez.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s
    Police say a Caledonia, Ont., man who disappeared in 1992 took the name of a dead boy and lived under the assumed name until his death 10 years later.

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls
    The Supreme Court of Canada has ordered a new trial in the case of two Edmonton men who made child pornography after videotaping two 14-year-old girls performing sex acts.

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian
    The video showing Donovan McGlaughlin's Canadian citizenship ceremony in Dawson City, Yukon, is just two minutes and 11 seconds long but the elaborate script was decades in the making.

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian

    Shrinking Demand For Blood Products Behind Closure Of Blood Donor Clinics

    Shrinking Demand For Blood Products Behind Closure Of Blood Donor Clinics
    Ian Mumford, the agency's chief supply chain officer, says advances in medicine have prompted Canada's hospitals to reduce their demand for blood products.

    Shrinking Demand For Blood Products Behind Closure Of Blood Donor Clinics

    P.E.I. Man Signs Peace Bond Over Ricin Allegations Made By The RCMP

    P.E.I. Man Signs Peace Bond Over Ricin Allegations Made By The RCMP
    CHARLOTTETOWN — A man accused of having enough castor beans to produce a "substantial quantity" of the deadly toxin ricin signed a 12-month peace bond Friday in Charlottetown.

    P.E.I. Man Signs Peace Bond Over Ricin Allegations Made By The RCMP

    Wal-Mart Makes Public Guidelines To Suppliers On Animal Treatment, Use Of Antibiotics

    Wal-Mart Makes Public Guidelines To Suppliers On Animal Treatment, Use Of Antibiotics
    NEW YORK — Wal-Mart, the nation's largest food retailer, is urging its thousands of U.S. suppliers to curb the use of antibiotics in farm animals and improve treatment of them.

    Wal-Mart Makes Public Guidelines To Suppliers On Animal Treatment, Use Of Antibiotics