Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Nova Scotia Reports First Confirmed Case Of Zika In Woman Who Has Recovered

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 May, 2016 10:58 AM
    HALIFAX — Nova Scotia is reporting its first confirmed case of Zika virus, prompting public health officers to urge residents to take precautions when travelling abroad.
     
    Frank Atherton, deputy chief medical officer of health, said Monday the woman infected with the virus is in her 30s and the illness was detected after she fell ill upon her return to Nova Scotia from a trip.
     
     
    He says she's fully recovered, but added its presence is a reminder that people travelling to regions where the virus is flourishing should take steps to avoid mosquito bites.
     
    The mosquito-borne Zika virus is an epidemic in Central and Latin America, and the World Health Organization has declared it a global health emergency.
     
    It causes mild illness or no symptoms in most people but is believed to be linked to a birth defect that causes babies to be born with unusually small heads. It's also potentially linked to neurological disorders in some infected children and adults.
     
     
    "People who do travel to countries being affected by Zika outbreak can protect themselves by covering up and by avoiding mosquito bites," said Atherton.
     
    "It's that subset of women who are pregnant and who are thinking of becoming pregnant that we need to take special precautions for."
     
    Atherton said the public health office has sent out emails to doctors around the province outlining a protocol for when tests should be conducted and sent to a federal laboratory for analysis.
     
    A Health Canada website says that as of May 12 there were 80 travel-related cases of Zika and one locally acquired case through sexual transmission.
     
    The agency says the risk in Canada is very low because mosquitoes known to transmit the virus aren't established here and aren't well suited to the northern climate. 
     
    Atherton declined to comment on where or how the woman acquired the virus, but said she wasn't hospitalized and has since fully recovered.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    As Risk Of Farm Losses Rise, So Too Do Number Of Farmers Buying Crop Insurance

    As Risk Of Farm Losses Rise, So Too Do Number Of Farmers Buying Crop Insurance
      "There just seems to be increased risk, more risk all the time," says McIntyre, a wheat and canola farmer near Fairview in Alberta's Peace Country.

    As Risk Of Farm Losses Rise, So Too Do Number Of Farmers Buying Crop Insurance

    Sexual Harassment Complainants Are Free To Speak Out: Ontario Liberals

    Sexual Harassment Complainants Are Free To Speak Out: Ontario Liberals
    Wynne revealed Friday that former Liberal MPP Kim Craitor was asked to resign in 2013 after workplace sexual harassment complaints were made against him.

    Sexual Harassment Complainants Are Free To Speak Out: Ontario Liberals

    One Of Two Men Accused Of Killing Tim Bosma Won't Take The Stand In His Defence

    One Of Two Men Accused Of Killing Tim Bosma Won't Take The Stand In His Defence
    "The defence elects to call no evidence," said Dellen Millard's lawyer, Ravin Pillay.

    One Of Two Men Accused Of Killing Tim Bosma Won't Take The Stand In His Defence

    Animal Lovers To Try Working With Authorities To Rescue Pets Left In Fort Mac

    Animal Lovers To Try Working With Authorities To Rescue Pets Left In Fort Mac
    Members of the group said that by Sunday afternoon, they'd received thousands of emails from evacuees of the northern Alberta wildfire whose pets were left behind.

    Animal Lovers To Try Working With Authorities To Rescue Pets Left In Fort Mac

    Fatal Fall, Unprepared Hikers, Challenge Vancouver's North Shore Teams In Separate Rescues

    Fatal Fall, Unprepared Hikers, Challenge Vancouver's North Shore Teams In Separate Rescues
    VANCOUVER — The BC Coroners Service is investigating the death of a hiker on Vancouver's North Shore.

    Fatal Fall, Unprepared Hikers, Challenge Vancouver's North Shore Teams In Separate Rescues

    Six Year Prison Sentence For Ontario Daycare Operator Convicted In Child's Death

    Six Year Prison Sentence For Ontario Daycare Operator Convicted In Child's Death
      April Luckese was found guilty in March in the death of 14-month-old Duy-An Nguyen after a judge determined she lost her patience and assaulted the child, causing a skull fracture.

    Six Year Prison Sentence For Ontario Daycare Operator Convicted In Child's Death