Thursday, March 26, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Measles Vaccination Program Makes 'Significant' Progress: Health Minister

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jun, 2019 09:29 PM

    VANCOUVER — Health Minister Adrian Dix says British Columbia has seen a "dramatic increase" in the number of children vaccinated against measles since the introduction of a provincial program targeting the infectious disease.

     

    More than 15,786 kids and teens were inoculated against the highly contagious airborne disease in April and May, the first two months of the new Measles Immunization Catch-up Program.


    The goal is to immunize children from kindergarten through Grade 12 if they have not previously been vaccinated against measles or may not have received both recommended doses.


    The voluntary program was introduced following a measles outbreak in B.C. linked to two French schools in Vancouver, and Dix says 29 cases have been confirmed in the province so far this year.


    Health authorities have also reviewed more than half a million students' immunization records, and the parents and guardians of those with incomplete or missing records have been notified.


    The information, combined with new immunizations, means the number of students confirmed to have both doses over the first two months rose by 23,876.


    "We're making progress, you can see in these numbers, which are a dramatic increase over the same periods in previous years," Dix says.


    A report released Tuesday did not provide corresponding immunization figures for April and May 2018 and the Health Ministry did not have them immediately available.


    But the report says the BC Centre for Disease Control distributed 96,420 doses of the measles vaccine to health authorities in April and May, compared with 24,570 doses over the same period last year.


    Beginning in September, it will be mandatory for parents to report their child's immunization record. The measure does not require children to be vaccinated in order to attend school.


    Dix says British Columbia's measles cases come amid international outbreaks of the disease, including more than 1,000 cases in the United States.


    "We know that people, British Columbians, travel in the summer and this is a good time, if you haven't been immunized, to be immunized," he says.


    There will be 900 public clinics and 230 school-based clinics offering the vaccine this month, he adds.


    While misinformation about vaccinations circulates online, he says the "vast, vast majority" of people understand that immunizations make children safe.


    Measles can cause complications and death, most commonly in infants younger than one year old, and adults, the BC Centre for Disease Control says.


    Symptoms include fever, cough, watery eyes and a red blotchy rash that begins on the face and spreads all over the body.


    Anyone who suspects they have measles should contact their doctor before visiting the office to avoid infecting other patients in the waiting area.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Cattle Farmers Want Beyond Meat To Stop Marketing Itself As Plant-Based Meat

    MONTREAL — Cattle producers across the country are backing Quebec colleagues who have filed a complaint over a popular new meatless burger that is being advertised as "plant-based meat."

    Quebec Cattle Farmers Want Beyond Meat To Stop Marketing Itself As Plant-Based Meat

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels
    VANCOUVER — Over 100 people have fallen sick following a suspected norovirus outbreak at two Vancouver-area hotels over the weekend.

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels

    Feds 'Deeply Concerned' By China's Arrests Of Canadians Kovrig, Spavor

    Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says the government is "deeply concerned" about China's decision to formally arrest two Canadians citizens it has been holding since December.

    Feds 'Deeply Concerned' By China's Arrests Of Canadians Kovrig, Spavor

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation
    PARIS — A new digital charter will dictate how the country will combat hate speech, misinformation and online electoral interference in Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a technology conference in Paris on Thursday.

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation

    Archbishop Fears Quebec Government's Secularism Bill Will Erode Freedoms

    MONTREAL — The Quebec government's move to legislate on secularism will come at the expense of individual freedoms, Montreal's archbishop said Thursday.

    Archbishop Fears Quebec Government's Secularism Bill Will Erode Freedoms

    Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.

    Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.
    WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump has granted a full pardon to Conrad Black, a former newspaper publisher who has written a flattering political biography of Trump.

    Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.