Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Toronto Reports 4 Unlinked Measles Cases; None Travelled, Means More Out There

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2015 02:16 PM
  • Toronto Reports 4 Unlinked Measles Cases; None Travelled, Means More Out There
Toronto Public Health has recorded four cases of measles in two children and two adults within the past week.
 
And a department official admits there are likely more cases in the city, because none of the infected people have recently travelled outside the country.
 
The measles virus does not regularly circulate in Canada.
 
Cases are typically only reported when an unvaccinated person gets infected abroad and brings measles back to Canada, or when an infected person travels here and spreads the virus.
 
Sometimes those imported cases don't lead to local spread. But in other cases, they can trigger large outbreaks, such as last year's epidemic in British Columbia in which more than 400 people became infected.
 
Dr. Lisa Berger says Toronto Public Health is investigating the four cases to try to determine how the infected people contracted the virus.
 
Measles is best known for triggering a widespread red rash. But the virus can make people who contract it — especially young children — very sick.
 
In the United States, about 28 per cent of the young children who contracted measles between 2001 and 2013 ended up in hospital. Complications can include pneumonia, permanent brain damage and deafness.
 
Measles can also be fatal. While most survive, it's estimated that between one and three children out of every 1,000 who are infected will die.
 
Berger says people born after 1970 who haven't had two doses of measles vaccine should get vaccinated.
 
Measles was widespread in Canada before the vaccine was introduced in 1970. People born before that date are believed to be immune because they would have been infected previously.
 
Berger says none of the four people who have been diagnosed in the past week had the requisite two doses of measles vaccine.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Healthy fat in olive oil may repair failing hearts

Healthy fat in olive oil may repair failing hearts
Oleate, a common dietary fat found in olive oil, may help restore proper metabolism of fuel that gets disturbed in case of heart failure, a study suggests....

Healthy fat in olive oil may repair failing hearts

Sleep twitches connected to brain development in babies

Sleep twitches connected to brain development in babies
Sleep twitches activate circuits throughout the developing brain, says the study, suggesting that twitches teach newborns about their limbs and what they can do with them....

Sleep twitches connected to brain development in babies

Scorpion venom to fight brain cancer

Scorpion venom to fight brain cancer
Scientists have received approval from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to use "Tumour Paint", a product derived from scorpion venom for study...

Scorpion venom to fight brain cancer

Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?

Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?
The cells that control our rhythms of sleep and wakefulness may have first evolved in the ocean - hundreds of millions of years ago - in response to pressure...

Human sleep patterns evolved first in ocean?

How exercise keeps depression at bay

How exercise keeps depression at bay
It is known that physical exercise has many beneficial effects on health and researchers have now found how exercise shields the brain from stress-induced depression....

How exercise keeps depression at bay

Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer

Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer
British scientists have found that chemical signals produced by a type of immune cells, called macrophages, also act as a "survival signal" for melanoma cells....

Blocking immune cells may treat deadly skin cancer