A child from Ontario under the age of five has died from measles, according to a report released by Ontario Public Health on Thursday.
The report did not specify where the child was from but it did say that the child had not been vaccinated against the virus.
In Canada, the general rule of thumb is that children are expected to received there first vaccination between the ages of 12 and 15 months followed by a booster after they reach 18 months but before they start school.
A spokesperson for Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones expressed condolences to the grieving family.
“Our heart goes out to the family that has tragically lost their child. Our thoughts are with them as they navigate this challenging time,” spokesperson for the Minister of Health Hannah Jensen wrote.
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“We remind all Ontarians to stay up to date with their vaccinations to ensure themselves, and their loved ones are protected against infectious diseases.”
Back in February, Ontario’s top doctor followed that news by sending a memo, which was obtained by Global News, to local public health units that warned they could see a rise in the number of cases.
In the memo, Dr. Kieran Moore cited a “dramatic” global rise in the number of measles cases.
That has rung true as there have already been 22 cases reported over the first four-and-a-half months of 2024, according to the report.
Before the COVID pandemic, there were somewhere between seven and 22 cases per year between 2013 and 2019. The virus pretty much disappeared during as the pandemic raged on while there were seven cases last year.
The report said that a majority of those cases have come through travel or were spread through people who were abroad.
Five of the 22 people who have caught the virus have ended up in hospital, with all five being children who had not been vaccinated, the report said.
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