Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto's measles count rises to six with report of another infected adult

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2015 12:38 PM
  • Toronto's measles count rises to six with report of another infected adult

TORONTO — Public health officials in Toronto say the city's measles count has risen to six with the diagnosis of another adult patient.

In the past 10 days four adults and two children in Canada's largest city have come down with the disease.

As well, a woman in the Niagara region southwest of Toronto has also contracted measles.

Toronto Public Health spokesperson Lenore Bromley says the latest person to become infected was born before 1970.

That's significant because that was before measles vaccine was introduced in Canada.

People born before 1970 are generally assumed to be immune to measles because most children contracted the highly contagious virus in the days before vaccine was available.

Bromley says public health is still trying to figure out how the virus was introduced to Canada, whether there are connections among the cases and whether more cases are going undetected.

But she says to date there are no clear links among any of the infected people.

MORE National ARTICLES

Timeline of events in case of accused killer Luka Rocco Magnotta

Timeline of events in case of accused killer Luka Rocco Magnotta
MONTREAL — The jurors at Luka Rocco Magnotta's first-degree murder trial were sequestered on Monday. Here is a timeline of events in the case:

Timeline of events in case of accused killer Luka Rocco Magnotta

Dog frozen to the ground in northern Saskatchewan gets prosthetic paws

Dog frozen to the ground in northern Saskatchewan gets prosthetic paws
REGINA — A dog that lost its back paws after they were frozen to the ground in northern Saskatchewan is now running around on prosthetic parts.

Dog frozen to the ground in northern Saskatchewan gets prosthetic paws

Judicial review begins in Nova Scotia for private Christian law school

Judicial review begins in Nova Scotia for private Christian law school
HALIFAX — A private Christian university in British Columbia is hoping to persuade a judge to overturn a decision by the Nova Scotia Barristers' Society to deny accreditation to graduates of the university's proposed law school.

Judicial review begins in Nova Scotia for private Christian law school

Alberta imposes cost saving measures in face of falling energy revenues

Alberta imposes cost saving measures in face of falling energy revenues
EDMONTON — Alberta is imposing some cost-saving measures to help deal with sharply falling resource revenues.

Alberta imposes cost saving measures in face of falling energy revenues

Cafe at centre of 2013 deadly Lac-Megantic explosion reopens

Cafe at centre of 2013 deadly Lac-Megantic explosion reopens
LAC-MEGANTIC, Que. — The restaurant-bar at ground zero of the deadly train derailment and explosion that killed 47 people in July 2013 is back in business.

Cafe at centre of 2013 deadly Lac-Megantic explosion reopens

Not dead yet: Fight continues over EU effort to label oilsands as dirty oil

Not dead yet: Fight continues over EU effort to label oilsands as dirty oil
OTTAWA — Like a movie monster from the black bog, a European Union directive that would stigmatize "dirty" imports of Canadian bitumen refuses to die.

Not dead yet: Fight continues over EU effort to label oilsands as dirty oil