The Telegram (St. John's)

Public urged to update vaccines after mumps, measles cases reported

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Public health officials and infectious disease experts are urging Canadians to check that their vaccinatio­ns are up to date as clusters of mumps are investigat­ed in Ontario and Alberta, and measles cases are probed in Nova Scotia.

The viral infections are both covered by the measlesmum­ps-rubella (MMR) or measles-mumps-rubella-varicella (MMRV) vaccines. But experts say people between the ages of 18 and 35 need to ensure they’ve had two doses of the shots to bolster their immunity. “Mumps and measles are very contagious illnesses... at the moment we have this particular issue with people who’ve only had one dose of vaccine. For this age group, it’s a good time to check and make sure they’ve had two doses,” said Dr. Allison McGeer, director of infection control at Toronto’s Mount Sinai Hospital.

McGeer explained that when the mumps and measles vaccine was introduced, only one dose was administer­ed but it later became apparent that two doses were needed for it to be effective over the long term.

McGeer said there was nothing overly worrisome about the recent mumps and measles cases but noted that they served as a reminder of the importance of immunizati­on efforts.

“The fact that you can still get clusters of cases is a marker for just how important having those vaccinatio­n programs is. If they didn’t happen then everybody got sick.”

In Toronto, public health officials said Friday that there were 17 confirmed cases of mumps in the city, all involving people between 18 and 35 years of age who had frequented west-end bars.

A Toronto Public Health spokeswoma­n said 60 per cent of those cases were not immunized or under-immunized. Lenore Bromley noted, however, that the risk to the general public was low.

In Alberta, officials said there were up to four potential cases of mumps in Edmonton, which typically sees zero to two cases each year. And a hockey team based in Medicine Hat, Alta. had seven players and a coach with mumps, Alberta Health Services said.

The mumps virus is found in saliva and respirator­y droplets, and is spread from person to person through coughing, sneezing, and coming into contact with a person’s saliva by sharing drinks or utensils, or by kissing.

Dr. Sarah Wilson, a medical epidemiolo­gist with Public Health Ontario, said individual­s in the age range currently more susceptibl­e to mumps may also be more at risk because of their behaviour traits.

That group of young adults is more likely to engage in behaviours and activities in which mumps spreads easily, like playing on sports teams where water bottles might be shared, living in dormitorie­s in close conditions and sharing drinks and food in bars, she said.

“These situations provide really rich opportunit­ies for the mumps virus, if it’s introduced, to spread easily in a population that might not be up to date with respect to mumps vaccine,” said Wilson. “I think those are some of the potential explanatio­n for why we’re seeing more mumps these days, in particular in this age group.”

Wilson explained that even those who get two doses of the vaccine can still sometimes end up with mumps — as seen in 40 per cent of the Toronto cases — as the vaccine is considered about 88 per cent effective at that point.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? In a 1957 photo Jon Douglas, 6 visits his friend, Greg Cox, standing behind a sign warning he has mumps, on the door of his home in Altamont, Ill. Fifty years ago, mumps was once a childhood rite of passage of puffy cheeks and swollen jaws. That all...
CP PHOTO In a 1957 photo Jon Douglas, 6 visits his friend, Greg Cox, standing behind a sign warning he has mumps, on the door of his home in Altamont, Ill. Fifty years ago, mumps was once a childhood rite of passage of puffy cheeks and swollen jaws. That all...

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