Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Hospitals To Watch For Vaping-Related Illnesses: Health Minister

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Sep, 2019 07:16 PM

    REGINA - The government of Saskatchewan is going to watch for any vaping-related illnesses in the province.

     

    Health Minister Jim Reiter says there's no record of pulmonary illnesses associated with vaping in Saskatchewan, but he's asked health officials to monitor all potential cases in hospital intensive care units.

     

    The province's chief medical health officer has also notified intensive care units that they are to report all cases of non-infectious severe respiratory disease possibly due to vaping to local medical health officers.

     

    "Ultimately, in Canada, we want all such cases to be reported to the chief public health officer of Canada," Saskatchewan Chief Medical Health Officer, Dr. Saqib Shahab said Friday.

     

    "Are we seeing, in Canada, potentially going forwards, what the U.S. has been seeing over the past 30 days?"

     

    At least one serious vaping-related illness has been reported in Ontario and more than 500 cases — including seven deaths — have been recorded in the United States.

     

    "These are, for the most part, people who are otherwise young, healthy, with no pre-existing heart or lung disease who develop severe respiratory infection, get very ill, and unfortunately in some cases, die," said Shahab.

     

    He said American public health officials learned that those who fell sick had vaped within the past 90 days. And in many cases they did so on a daily basis, using products that were not regulated, such as vaping pods with added substances like cannabis.

     

    The president of the Canadian Medical Association recently has said youth vaping has become a public health crisis.

     

    Reiter said in a statement that he's worried about how popular vaping is among young people. And he wants parents to warn their children about the risks.

     

    Shahab said the province is proposing changes for the fall that would see vaping products treated the same way as tobacco ones, including includes not displaying them in retail stores and restricting sales to minors.

     

    "I think that will be really important to address the overall trend of in youth vaping."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Government Approves Surrey's Plan To Establish Its Own Municipal Police Force

    Mike Farnworth and Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum released a statement this morning, announcing that a “joint project team has been struck.”

    B.C. Government Approves Surrey's Plan To Establish Its Own Municipal Police Force

    Retired Richmond, B.C. Fisherman Nets $60-Million Lottery Jackpot

    Retired Richmond, B.C. fisherman Joseph Katalinic holds his 60 million dollar win at the British Columbia's Lottery Corporation headquarters in Vancouver, Wednesday, August, 21, 2019. Katalinic's win is the largest of its kind in B.C. lotto history.  

    Retired Richmond, B.C. Fisherman Nets $60-Million Lottery Jackpot

    Vancouver To Assess Possible Court Action Against Campers Ordered Out Of Park

    Several dozen tents have remained in a park in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside following an eviction-notice deadline ordering as many as 200 people out of an encampment that began six months ago.

    Vancouver To Assess Possible Court Action Against Campers Ordered Out Of Park

    Independent Investigation Begins Into Langley RCMP Response To Langley Teen Carson Crimeni's Death

    The office that looks into all cases of police-involved deaths or serious injuries in British Columbia says it is examining what role two Langley RCMP officers may have played in the death of a 14-year-old boy

    Independent Investigation Begins Into Langley RCMP Response To Langley Teen Carson Crimeni's Death

    B.C. Father Takes Stand At Trial, Denies Killing Daughters And Attempting Suicide

    A Vancouver Island man testified Wednesday that he didn't kill his two daughters and denied he tried to take his own life on the day they died.

    B.C. Father Takes Stand At Trial, Denies Killing Daughters And Attempting Suicide

    Border Official Questioned Meng On Alleged Business In Iran: Court Documents

    VANCOUVER - Court documents released ahead of a Huawei executive's extradition trial suggest a Canadian border official questioned Meng Wanzhou about her business before RCMP arrested her.

    Border Official Questioned Meng On Alleged Business In Iran: Court Documents