CBC Edition

Montreal Public Health says 14 cases of measles have led to thousands of contacts

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Montreal Public Health says there have been 14 confirmed cases of measles in the city since the begin‐ ning of February, with only two believed to have been acquired abroad, sug‐ gesting local transmissi­on.

These cases have exposed several thousand individual­s in various settings in Mon‐ treal, including various health-care environmen­ts, the health agency said in an update Wednesday.

A complete list of loca‐ tions where exposure may have occurred has been pub‐ lished online. The list in‐ cludes pharmacies, super‐ markets, restaurant­s, coffee shops, Metro lines, daycare centres, pediatric ERs and hospitals.

Given the current resur‐ gence of measles worldwide, Montreal Public Health says it anticipate­s infections among individual­s who have travelled abroad, especially if they were not adequately protected against the virus.

Travel associated with March break could lead to an increase in infections ac‐ quired abroad, the agency says.

The agency is urging health-care profession­als to verify their own vaccinatio­n status and get vaccinated im‐ mediately if necessary to avoid preventive isolation if exposed to a contagious case.

"We recommend checking the protection status of all personnel working in healthcare settings," the statement said.

Health-care profession­als are asked to report any sus‐ pected measles cases by phone without waiting for laboratory results in order to expedite public-health inter‐ ventions, such as contact tracing.

Fast reporting will also fa‐ cilitate the administra­tion of prophylaxi­s to individual­s at risk of complicati­ons within the expected short time‐ frames, the statement said.

This week, Montreal Pub‐ lic Health is launching a measles vaccinatio­n cam‐ paign in select schools.

Neither students nor school staff are required to be vaccinated in Quebec, but those who are unvaccinat­ed could be forced to stay home for weeks at a time if infec‐ tion is detected in the school, according to Dr. Paul Le Guerrier, who is responsibl­e for immunizati­on at Montre‐ al's health agency.

He said both adults and children will be excluded from schools up to 14 days after the last case of measles in the school.

"If there are several cases in the school, this could be a month or a month-and-a-half being excluded from the school," he said.

Dr. Marie-Astrid Lefebvre, a pediatric infectious dis‐ eases specialist with the Montreal Children's Hospital, told CBC News that measles, which travels in air, is "very easy to transmit to multiple people who are just present in the same area as the indi‐ vidual."

Across the world, measles remains among the common causes of child deaths.

"Measles has been elimi‐ nated from Canada, but from time to time there are trav‐ ellers who are not ade‐ quately vaccinated that go to many countries in the world where measles is endemic," said Le Guerrier.

It can take one to two weeks before someone ex‐ posed to the virus begins showing symptoms. Those symptoms include: high fever, runny nose, coughing, red eyes and general discom‐ fort. Then, a rash develops on the face and body.

According to Quebec Pub‐ lic Health, a person with the virus is contagious four days before the rash appears and can remain contagious for up to four days afterward.

Complicati­ons include ear infections, pneumonia, con‐ vulsions and, in some cases, death.

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