How Canada became the centre of a measles outbreak in North America

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g8d39gdr0o

30 Comments

  1. Some of the key sections from this analytical piece:

    >Experts say it’s tough to pinpoint why measles have spread wider in Canada than in the US, but many agree that cases in both countries are likely underreported.
    >
    >”The numbers that we have in Alberta are just the tip of the iceberg,” said Dr Suttorp.
    >
    >But there is one big reason driving the outbreak: low vaccination rates, said Janna Shapiro, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Toronto’s Centre for Vaccine Preventable Diseases.
    >
    >Dr Shapiro said there is “an element of chance” at play, where a virus is introduced to a community by accident and spreads among those who are unprotected.
    >
    >”The only thing that is going to stop an outbreak is getting those vaccination rates up,” she said. “If the public is not willing to get vaccinated, then it will continue until the virus can’t find anymore receptible hosts.”
    >
    >In general, studies show that vaccine hesitancy has risen in Canada since the pandemic, and the data reflects that. In southern Alberta, for example, the number of MMR vaccines administered has dropped by nearly half from 2019 to 2024, according to provincial figures.
    >
    >Covid-19 vaccine mandates were fiercely opposed by some during the pandemic, prompting the so-called “Freedom Convoy” protest in Ottawa where truckers gridlocked the city for two weeks in 2021.
    >
    >That opposition has since expanded to other vaccines, said Dr Shapiro.
    >
    >Pandemic-related disruptions also left some children behind on routine immunisations. With measles having been largely eliminated, families likely did not prioritise getting their kids’ vaccinations up to date, Dr Shapiro said.
    >
    >…
    >
    >Health units across the country have also tried to encourage people to get vaccinated through public bulletins and radio advertisements. But the response is notably more muted than that during the Covid-19 pandemic, health officials say.

    Getting vaccinations for diseases such as measles should be a matter of course by now, but unfortunately this has not been the case over the past number of years. This has put us in a position where there is decreased resilience to these communicable diseases, and in particular puts those who are more vulnerable at higher risk of complications and death.

  2. A lot of rural and religious folks have gone antivax in Alberta. Cuz… “‘Berta!, Fuck yeah!”

  3. random20190826 on

    Andrew Wakefield deserved the punishment he got (by having his medical license revoked) for pushing fraudulent theories about the MMR vaccine causing autism. Now we end up having measles outbreaks that sicken thousands.

  4. erasmus_phillo on

    tldr it’s because of Mennonite communities who don’t believe in vaccination

    wanted to say this before this sub blames immigrants for something else

  5. RiversongSeeker on

    For some reason parents stopped vaccinating their kids during the lockdowns. Poor kids.

  6. Important-Event6832 on

    Reliable medical records from the USA? 
    The current administration executive directive on that…

    testing: ‘If we stopped testing right now, we’d have very few cases, if any’

  7. Y’know, this is all BS. 10-15 years ago, when we had our kids, there was *plenty* of talk of either getting the vaccines or not – and that it was our choice to get it or not.

    Doctors are just as complicit in this outbreak – this is doctors hearing new parents saying ‘no’ to vaccines, then just shrugging and walking away. It’s eradicated, so what’s the difference anyways? You start doing that often enough – what’s just one baby? – and here we are.

    Don’t stand there and tell me that doctors are sounding the alarm, when they hard just as big a part of this as anyone else. SMH…

  8. Title is wrong Typical Foreigners… It like them saying they go to Canada and its Toronto…. Article SHOULD be title “How Alberta became the centre of a measles outbreak in North America” there Fixed 👌

  9. cobrachickenwing on

    Failure to quarantine like COVID lead to this headline. We know the Mennonites are spreading it in certain communities. We chose not to quarantine them and now it has spread like wildfire.

  10. Born and raised in Alberta…
    My fellow Albertans are idiots. And love the taste of KoolAid

  11. A big part of it is Alberta Conservatives led by Ditzi Danielle Smith.

    Idiotic Leadership.

  12. Because people be dumb and don’t trust a 59+ yr old vaccine that saves lives.

  13. canadiankiwi03 on

    Not hard to work out: dumb people have rights. Unfortunately they use those rights to do dumb people things. For example: simultaneously not understanding and not trusting science.

  14. In Canada, there are two kinds of Canadians depending on lifestyle and beliefs. The main factor is geography: rural or urban Canada. Hell would freeze over before you can change some people’s beliefs. Sad but true.

    That being said, a concerted effort is needed to properly educate rural folks devoid of politics.

  15. Mad-Mad-Mad-Mad-Mike on

    Am I a bad person for not feeling any sympathy for these people at all?

    You have freedom of choice in this country, but that does not protect you from the consequences of those choices. These antivaxxers choose to believe their aunts’ facebook posts instead of scientists who actually know what they’re talking about. They were free to make that stupid decision and this is the result of that stupid decision.

    You reap what you sow.