A British Columbia teenager who got sick with bird flu two weeks ago did not infect any people or animals they were in contact with while infectious, according to provincial ...
By Michele Brunoro and Kaija Jussinoja Click here for updates on this story VANCOUVER, B.C. (CTV Network) — The teenager who is infected with the first human case of H5N1 avian influenza acquired in ...
B.C. health officials say they still don't know how a teenager became infected with the H5N1 strain of avian flu but say no ...
Health officials in British Columbia, Canada, have failed, for now, to confirm how a teenager there became infected with H5N1 ...
In the 2009 swine flu pandemic, multiple reassortment events in pigs and birds led to the novel H1N1 virus strain, which led ...
"This young person has received the best possible care from the clinical team at B.C. Children’s (Hospital) and is stable, ...
At this point, there is no evidence that this particular mutated H5N1 virus has traveled beyond the one Canadian ... “no further cases have been identified,” Dr. Bonnie Henry, provincial health ...
Bonnie Henry, the B.C. provincial officer of health, will host a press conference at 11 a.m. Tuesday to provide an update on ...
A child in California has tested positive for bird flu, despite having no known contact with infected animals, state officials reported.
The avian flu virus isolated from a hospitalized teenager in Vancouver has mutations in key areas that could help the virus ...