Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Monkeypox poses low risk, but everyone susceptible

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 May, 2022 11:44 AM
  • Monkeypox poses low risk, but everyone susceptible

OTTAWA - Canada's top public health officials say the risk posed by monkeypox is low, but nearly everyone in the country is susceptible because routine vaccination against smallpox ended decades ago.

The first two cases of the virus in Canada were confirmed in Quebec on Thursday, but chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam says a couple dozen possible cases are being investigated and the federal public health agency still does not know how widespread it might be.

Monkeypox is typically milder but in the same family of viruses as the now-eradicated smallpox, and can cause fever, headache, muscle aches, exhaustion, swollen lymph nodes and lesions.

The Public Health Agency of Canada says it is spread through prolonged close contact, including through direct contact with an infected person's respiratory droplets, bodily fluids or sores, and is not very contagious in a typical social setting.

There is global evidence that smallpox vaccines can offer protection against monkeypox, and Tam says Canada does maintain a small stockpile of doses in case of a biological incident.

Canada stopped routinely immunizing people against smallpox in 1972 and deputy chief public health officer Dr. Howard Njoo says that has left most people susceptible to monkeypox.

MORE National ARTICLES

Mixed Martial Arts teacher charged with sexual exploitation of a young female: Ridge Meadows RCMP

Mixed Martial Arts teacher charged with sexual exploitation of a young female: Ridge Meadows RCMP
In October of 2021, police received information that a mixed martial arts trainer based out of Pitt Meadows had allegedly sexually exploited a female youth, for several years, during training sessions dating back to 2016.

Mixed Martial Arts teacher charged with sexual exploitation of a young female: Ridge Meadows RCMP

Feds earmark $18M to support pardon applications

Feds earmark $18M to support pardon applications
Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino says the money will go to organizations active in corrections, conditional release and community reintegration.

Feds earmark $18M to support pardon applications

No vaccine exemption for truckers, feds clarify

No vaccine exemption for truckers, feds clarify
The Canada Border Services Agency created widespread confusion last month after it issued a statement to media saying that unvaccinated truckers would remain exempt from quarantine and testing requirements after entering the country at the Canada-U.S. border.    

No vaccine exemption for truckers, feds clarify

PBO: More money needed for child-care plan

PBO: More money needed for child-care plan
The Liberals' budget last year set aside $29.8 billion in new spending starting this fiscal year through to 2026 for the Canada-wide system by sending money to provinces and territories to cover costs.

PBO: More money needed for child-care plan

GoFundMe called to Commons committee

GoFundMe called to Commons committee
New Democrat MP Alistair MacGregor won the unanimous approval today of the House of Commons public safety committee to invite representatives from the crowdfunding website to answer questions about its security measures to ensure its funds are not used to promote extremism.    

GoFundMe called to Commons committee

B.C. Speaker yelled at staff during inquiry: Trial

B.C. Speaker yelled at staff during inquiry: Trial
Randall Ennis, who served as acting sergeant-at-arms in 2018, told the B.C. Supreme Court in James's fraud and breach of trust trial that the locks to the clerk's office were changed after James was suspended.

B.C. Speaker yelled at staff during inquiry: Trial