Make sure measles shots up to date, Public Health Agency says in wake of B.C. outbreak
TORONTO — Canada’s top doctor is urging Canadians who haven’t been vaccinated against measles to get their shots in the wake of a B.C. outbreak of the disease and the always present danger of cases being imported into the country by travellers.
Dr. Theresa Tam, Canada’s chief public health officer, said measles is a “serious and highly contagious disease” and that getting inoculated is the best way to avoid getting sick — and transmitting it to others who may be unprotected.
Tam’s comments Tuesday come in the wake of a cluster of nine cases of measles in Vancouver that began in recent weeks after an unvaccinated Canadian child contracted the disease on a family trip to Vietnam.
“There’s always a risk of measles importation into Canada,” Tam said from Ottawa. “We eliminated measles in Canada (in 1998), but what we’re seeing is importation from when people go travelling to another country and then bring it back.