adplus-dvertising
Connect with us

Health

Big haul of protective gear arrives in Nova Scotia amid COVID-19 outbreak – CBC.ca

Published

 on



Nova Scotia health officials are breathing a “collective sigh of relief” after the arrival of a large shipment of personal protective equipment this week which included 1.7 million surgical masks and an unspecified number of gowns and face shields.

“In today’s volatile supply chain, we are never able to count a product until it is in our hands,” says a notice posted by the Nova Scotia Health Authority.

The equipment arrived Monday at a COVID-19 warehouse where the total number of masks now tops two million.

300x250x1

Officials are trying to secure much more from suppliers that include Truro garment manufacturer Stanfield’s Limited, which joined the Canadian COVID-19 supply chain earlier this month.

“Last week we added another 240,000 gowns to the Stanfield order and we are about to sign a deal for a sanitizer provider,” the health authority said in an update.

The Nova Scotia Health Authority says it is working on a significant order for an N95-equivalent product. (Nicholas Pfosi/Reuters)

“We ordered 200,000 gowns yesterday when an opportunity arose and we ordered another million masks today. We are working on a significant order for an N95 equivalent product.”

N95 masks are more efficient at protecting wearers from particulates.

Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil said Tuesday some of the equipment came from China and was part of a national procurement deal with the federal government.

“Putting that together this stock will actually take us into May and we’re very confident that our supply line will be there,” McNeil said.

Mindful of supply

Health care workers in some facilities are being given two surgical masks per day.

Nova Scotia chief medical health officer Dr. Robert Strang said Tuesday if there are circumstances where a mask becomes “soiled or no longer effective in some other way, they are going to be provided a replacement.”

After receiving its latest shipment, the health authority remains mindful about supply.

“While this is very encouraging news, we remind all staff and physicians to continue using the right PPE at the right time. This will help ensure your safety and maintain our supply of PPE throughout the pandemic,” it said in its update.

PM: planes left China without shipments

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addressed the challenges of securing protective equipment in his daily briefing on Tuesday.

He said a cargo plane from Canada and another from an unspecified province landed in China but because of delays and strict limits on aircraft time left without the intended shipment.

McNeil said he did not think the flight was chartered by Nova Scotia.

MORE TOP STORIES:

Let’s block ads! (Why?)

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Health

Interior Health delivers nearly 800K immunization doses in 2023

Published

 on

Interior Health says it delivered nearly 800,000 immunization doses last year — a number almost equal to the region’s population.

The released figure of 784,980 comes during National Immunization Awareness Week, which runs April 22-30.

The health care organization, which serves a large area of around 820,000,  says it’s using the occasion to boost vaccine rates even though there may be post-pandemic vaccine fatigue.

300x250x1

“This is a very important initiative because it ensures that communicable diseases stay away from a region,” said Dr. Silvina Mema of Interior Health.

However, not all those doses were for COVID; the tally includes childhood immunizations plus immunizations for adults.

But IHA said immunizations are down from the height of the pandemic, when COVID vaccines were rolled out, though it seems to be on par with previous pre-pandemic years.

Interior Health says it’d like to see the overall immunization rate rise.

“Certainly there are some folks who have decided a vaccine is not for them. And they have their reasons,” said Jonathan Spence, manager of communicable disease prevention and control at Interior Health.

“I think there’s a lot of people who are hesitant, but that’s just simply because they have questions.

“And that’s actually part of what we’re celebrating this week is those public health nurses, those pharmacists, who can answer questions and answer questions with really good information around immunization.”

Mima echoed that sentiment.

“We take immunization very seriously. It’s a science-based program that has saved countless lives across the world and eliminated diseases that were before a threat and now we don’t see them anymore,” she said.

“So immunization is very important.”

 

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Health

Remnants of bird flu virus found in pasteurized milk, FDA says

Published

 on

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday that samples of pasteurized milk had tested positive for remnants of the bird flu virus that has infected dairy cows.

The agency stressed that the material is inactivated and that the findings “do not represent actual virus that may be a risk to consumers.” Officials added that they’re continuing to study the issue.

“To date, we have seen nothing that would change our assessment that the commercial milk supply is safe,” the FDA said in a statement.

The announcement comes nearly a month after an avian influenza virus that has sickened millions of wild and commercial birds in recent years was detected in dairy cows in at least eight states. The Agriculture Department says 33 herds have been affected to date.

300x250x1

FDA officials didn’t indicate how many samples they tested or where they were obtained. The agency has been evaluating milk during processing and from grocery stores, officials said. Results of additional tests are expected in “the next few days to weeks.”

The PCR lab test the FDA used would have detected viral genetic material even after live virus was killed by pasteurization, or heat treatment, said Lee-Ann Jaykus, an emeritus food microbiologist and virologist at North Carolina State University

“There is no evidence to date that this is infectious virus and the FDA is following up on that,” Jaykus said.

Officials with the FDA and the USDA had previously said milk from affected cattle did not enter the commercial supply. Milk from sick animals is supposed to be diverted and destroyed. Federal regulations require milk that enters interstate commerce to be pasteurized.

Because the detection of the bird flu virus known as Type A H5N1 in dairy cattle is new and the situation is evolving, no studies on the effects of pasteurization on the virus have been completed, FDA officials said. But past research shows that pasteurization is “very likely” to inactivate heat-sensitive viruses like H5N1, the agency added.

Matt Herrick, a spokesman for the International Dairy Foods Association, said that time and temperature regulations for pasteurization ensure that the commercial U.S. milk supply is safe. Remnants of the virus “have zero impact on human health,” he wrote in an email.

Scientists confirmed the H5N1 virus in dairy cows in March after weeks of reports that cows in Texas were suffering from a mysterious malady. The cows were lethargic and saw a dramatic reduction in milk production. Although the H5N1 virus is lethal to commercial poultry, most infected cattle seem to recover within two weeks, experts said.

To date, two people in U.S. have been infected with bird flu. A Texas dairy worker who was in close contact with an infected cow recently developed a mild eye infection and has recovered. In 2022, a prison inmate in a work program caught it while killing infected birds at a Colorado poultry farm. His only symptom was fatigue, and he recovered.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

 

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Health

Canada Falling Short in Adult Vaccination Rates – VOCM

Published

 on


Canada is about where it should be when it comes to childhood vaccines, but for adult vaccinations it’s a different story.

Dr. Vivien Brown of Immunize Canada says the overall population should have rates of between 80 and 90 per cent for most vaccines, but that is not the case.

She says most children are in that range but not for adult vaccines and ultimately the most at-risk populations are not being reached.

300x250x1

She says the population is under immunized for conditions such as pneumonia, shingles, tetanus, and pertussis.

Brown wants people to talk with their family physician or pharmacist to see if they are up-to-date on vaccines, and to get caught up because many are “killer diseases.”

Adblock test (Why?)

728x90x4

Source link

Continue Reading

Trending