Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Unvaccinated Ontario Child Develops Dangerous Tetanus Infection; Mumps Outbreak Also Reported

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jun, 2015 11:57 AM
  • Unvaccinated Ontario Child Develops Dangerous Tetanus Infection; Mumps Outbreak Also Reported
TORONTO — News that an unvaccinated Ontario boy is in hospital with a dangerous tetanus infection is prompting calls from worried parents seeking information on how to get their children vaccinated.
 
A spokesperson says the Grey Bruce health authority has had numerous inquiries since word of the case hit the news over the weekend.
 
Dr. Christine Kennedy says the unidentified six-year old is improving and has been moved out of the intensive care unit.
 
The child had not been vaccinated against tetanus, which causes a painful and life-threatening condition better known as lockjaw.
 
Though once more common, tetanus is now rare because most people are vaccinated against it.
 
Meanwhile, health authorities in Guelph, Ont., are investigating an outbreak of mumps among students of two local high schools. Mumps is also preventable by vaccination.
 
Kennedy says tetanus kills about 20 per cent of children who contract it, even if they get early treatment.
 
The infection is caused by exposure to spores of a bacterium called Clostridium tetani. The spores are widely found in soil, dust and manure, and trigger infection when they enter the body through a cut or wound.
 
Children are supposed to get four doses of vaccine containing tetanus protection at age 18 months, then at two, four and six years. The vaccine also protects against diphtheria, pertussis (whooping cough), hemophilus influenzae type B and polio.
 
Adults need tetanus booster shots every 10 years.
 
Kennedy says everyone needs to be vaccinated against tetanus because the disease is not one where so-called herd immunity can develop.
 
When high levels of children are immunized against some diseases — mumps, for instance — you would not expect to see many cases because enough people are protected that the disease cannot spread.
 
But tetanus doesn't spread from person to person; it is transmitted when a vulnerable person is exposed to bacteria. That means that even if 95 per cent of children were vaccinated, the remaining five per cent would still be at risk.
 
In reality, the vaccination rate is not that high. Kennedy says 79.7 per cent of seven-year-olds in Ontario are fully vaccinated against tetanus.

MORE National ARTICLES

Second Shooting At A Surrey Home Is Latest In Spate Of Violence

Second Shooting At A Surrey Home Is Latest In Spate Of Violence
SURREY, B.C. — A Surrey, B.C., home that was targeted in a drive-by shooting early Sunday is the same house where shots were fired on Thursday.

Second Shooting At A Surrey Home Is Latest In Spate Of Violence

Watch:Motorcycle Chase Through Surrey's Guildford Town Centre Mall Captured In Dramatic Police Video

Watch:Motorcycle Chase Through Surrey's Guildford Town Centre Mall Captured In Dramatic Police Video
SURREY, B.C. — A dramatic video showing police chasing a motorcyclist through a Vancouver-area mall is going viral on YouTube.

Watch:Motorcycle Chase Through Surrey's Guildford Town Centre Mall Captured In Dramatic Police Video

Two Men Dead From Stab Wounds In Downtown Vancouver's West Hotel

Two Men Dead From Stab Wounds In Downtown Vancouver's West Hotel
VANCOUVER — Two men are dead after a double stabbing in a hotel in Vancouver's troubled Downtown Eastside, prompting residents to speak out about ongoing safety concerns.

Two Men Dead From Stab Wounds In Downtown Vancouver's West Hotel

Kamloops Mounties Cleared In Death Of Man Who Was Tasered In Hospital Parkade

Kamloops Mounties Cleared In Death Of Man Who Was Tasered In Hospital Parkade
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Kamloops Mounties have been exonerated in connection with the death of a man at Royal Inland Hospital last summer.

Kamloops Mounties Cleared In Death Of Man Who Was Tasered In Hospital Parkade

Hundreds Protest In Toronto Against Government's Proposed Anti-terrorism Law

Hundreds Protest In Toronto Against Government's Proposed Anti-terrorism Law
Organizers say demonstrations will take place in dozens of cities in Canada, from Victoria to Halifax, in an event they have dubbed "Defend our Freedom." 

Hundreds Protest In Toronto Against Government's Proposed Anti-terrorism Law

A Voter's Guide To Political Polling In This 2015 Federal Election Year

A Voter's Guide To Political Polling In This 2015 Federal Election Year
As Canadians prepare to cast a ballot in a 2015 federal election, competing voter-preference polls will be peppering the airwaves, each claiming to be a representative snapshot of Canadian public opinion.

A Voter's Guide To Political Polling In This 2015 Federal Election Year