OTTAWA, Oct. 3 (Xinhua/APP): A premature baby infected with measles has died in Alberta, marking the province’s first measles-related death and the second nationwide since the start of Canada’s ongoing outbreak, local media reported Thursday.
Adriana LaGrange, Alberta’s minister of primary and preventative health services, said in an emailed statement she was “saddened” to confirm the death.
Children under five, pregnant people and those with weak immune systems face the highest risk from measles, LaGrange said. She urged anyone planning a pregnancy to ensure they have received two doses of a measles-containing vaccine beforehand, as vaccination is not recommended during pregnancy.
The country’s first recent measles death was reported in Ontario in June, when another prematurely born baby died of the disease.
The outbreak has been spreading across several provinces since last October. As of Sept. 20, Canadian health authorities had recorded 5,006 cases this year, with Alberta and Ontario the hardest hit.
Canada declared measles eliminated in 1998, but the resurgence has alarmed public health officials across the country.