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  • #91
    Re: Canada: train quarantined; one person died, others have flu-like symptoms

    Suddenly, safe has never been so scary

    May 10, 2008 04:30 AM
    Rick Westhead - in Foleyet, Ont. - Rob Ferguson - Robert Benzie in Toronto

    FOLEYET, Ont.?

    Isolating a Via Rail passenger train in this remote Northern Ontario community after one passenger died and others began complaining of flu-like symptoms was not an overreaction, officials say, but the new normal in a post-SARS world.

    The emergency measures swung into effect after Via Rail's Train No. 2 from Vancouver was stopped here at about 9 a.m. yesterday, stranding 264 passengers and 30 crew on the third day of its journey from the west.

    The move came after health officials received reports of the death and illnesses ? evoking memories of the 2003 SARS outbreak in Toronto that claimed 44 lives and heightened global sensitivity to the threat of infectious disease.

    Even after it became apparent that the death and illnesses were unrelated, Ontario's top health official said the response ? which saw helicopters, police cars and ambulances descend on the town of about 380 ? worked just the way it should. "I'm satisfied the appropriate steps were taken," Dr. David Williams, Ontario's chief medical officer of health, told a Queen's Park news conference yesterday.

    Even outsiders were impressed.
    "Had we had that high level of suspicion in Toronto, for example, at the beginning of SARS, they may not have had the number of cases they subsequently had," said Dr. Perry Kendall, British Columbia's chief medical officer of health.

    "So I think it's important that this is the new normal. And I think we will have events that turn out not to be events as we try to screen" for serious outbreaks, he said.

    Just over 10 hours after it was stopped, at 6:47 p.m., the train was cleared to continue its journey to Toronto, and was expected to arrive at Union Station at about 8 a.m.

    Viewed from the air early yesterday, the stranded train of three locomotives and 21 passenger cars was the focus of a beehive of attention ? a black helicopter sat nearby as an orange Ontario air ambulance lifted off with an ill passenger. Numerous police, ambulance and other official vehicles surrounded the quarantined train.

    The ill passenger, who was airlifted to the Timmins and District Hospital, was assessed and found not to have an infectious disease, Williams said.

    The dead woman, he added, had pre-existing health conditions, and the five ill passengers who were kept in isolation were sick when they boarded the train in Jasper, Alta. Neither health officials nor police would confirm reports the ill passengers were Australian tourists.

    During much of the morning, residents of Foleyet, west of Timmins, expressed awe and unease as emergency officials, the ambulances and helicopters, and a hazardous-materials team clad in biohazard suits swarmed their community and prepared for the worst.

    Deborah DesRochers, chair of the town, said the sight of so many emergency and police personnel was a wake-up call to residents that infectious disease can strike anywhere. "When we watch the news here, everything is happening down south, so when something like this does happen on your doorstep, it makes you stop and think," she said.

    "It does happen everywhere, and people have to be ready and aware of how to deal with that situation if it gets there. So we got a little lesson today and I think quite a few people got lessons today."

    Not far from the quarantined zone is the Northern Lights Restaurant, which was jammed with residents, including 53-year-old Leo DesRochers, who stopped by to get a closer look at the scene.

    "It's creating quite a bit of excitement, it's really rolling in here," he said of the mood in the bustling restaurant at lunch hour.

    "There's lots of people standing around, lots of police, and they're handling it with white gloves. They're being pretty careful about it."

    Williams told the Queen's Park news conference that officials quickly became convinced they were not dealing with a SARS-like outbreak, but had to take some conclusions on faith until medical tests could be completed.

    The dead woman "did most likely not have an infectious disease," he said, acknowledging no tests had been performed on her body as of late yesterday afternoon.

    Other passengers, he stressed, were "not at risk from contact with the deceased passenger." He said the train would continue to Toronto after other passengers had been screened as a precaution, and the train did not need to be disinfected.

    Another female passenger taken to hospital in Timmins was suffering from a shortness of breath but had "no fever, no cough." Tests showed a normal white blood cell count and ruled out influenza and "a number of infectious diseases," Williams said.

    Five other passengers who felt ill on the train had "mild" respiratory viruses when they boarded in Jasper several days ago, with one on antibiotics for "a sinus-type infection," Williams said.

    None of the cases appear connected. "It happened to be a confluence of three at the same time," the chief medical officer said.

    Williams expressed satisfaction with the way officials handled the situation.

    "I'm satisfied the appropriate steps were taken," he said. "People did it in a calm, collected way and went about their duties and responsibilities accordingly."

    By the time a retired doctor, who was travelling on the train, was asked to see the woman, she was unconscious in a washroom. He determined that she had died "a few minutes before," Williams said.

    She had been feeling unwell and the Via crew had given her oxygen earlier. But she was feeling fine the previous evening. "She seemed to be in good spirits and was socializing with people on the train."

    Via Rail has been asked to provide a manifest of passengers who may have gotten off earlier and prepare a fact sheet to soothe any concerns.

    NDP MPP France G?linas (Nickel Belt), who represents the area where the train was quarantined, expressed concern at how the incident was handled.

    "I am relieved that there is no evidence of an outbreak of infectious disease. Foleyet is in my riding and obviously the situation alarmed local residents," G?linas said in a statement.

    "(But) I do have concerns about what protocol was used to call for the isolation of the train. It appears even the province's chief medical officer of health doesn't know who called for the isolation," she said.

    "Given previous outbreaks of infectious disease in Ontario, this is disconcerting. The public deserves reassurance that the protocols we have in place are effective."

    With files from The Canadian Press

    -

    -----

    Comment


    • #92
      Re: Canada: train quarantined; one person died, others have flu-like symptoms

      Tests show no disease outbreak on Canadian train

      Sat May 10, 2008

      TORONTO (Reuters) - Lab exams confirmed on Saturday that there was no infectious disease outbreak on a cross-Canada train that was held in quarantine on Friday in northern Ontario after a passenger aboard died.

      "An assessment of all passengers on a VIA Rail train from Vancouver to Toronto has been completed and results confirm that there was no outbreak of infectious disease," Ontario's Ministry of Health said in a statement.

      The train, carrying 264 passengers and 30 crew members, was held for almost 10 hours near the tiny northern Ontario town of Foleyet on Friday after the sudden death of a woman, reported to be in her 60s.

      Another woman on the trip suffered shortness of breath, while five other passengers traveling in a group exhibited influenza-like symptoms, raising suspicions of an outbreak and prompting health officials to quarantine the train.


      Early reports of the death and scenes of emergency workers in hazardous material suits swarming the train brought back grim memories of the 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in Toronto, which killed dozens.

      Some of the group of five passengers were ill before they boarded on May 7 in Jasper, Alberta, and lab results showed four of them tested positive for seasonal flu, officials said.

      "All individuals seated in the vicinity of these five passengers were assessed. None have symptoms of influenza ... Another passenger on the train experiencing flu-like symptoms has tested positive for a cold virus," officials added.

      Lab results for the woman who had displayed shortness of breath and was taken to a hospital near the city of Timmins were also negative for the flu and other respiratory illness.
      The death of the woman is still under investigation, the health ministry said. "But an infectious disease as a cause of death has been ruled out."


      VIA Rail's trans-Canada services are popular with tourists, many of whom board the train in the Pacific Coast city of Vancouver, British Columbia, or in Jasper, Alberta, for the spectacular journey through the Rocky Mountains.

      The train arrived in Toronto on Saturday morning after resuming its journey late Friday afternoon.

      Comment


      • #93
        Re: Canada: train quarantined; Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

        Although it seems to be a succesful operation, a certain foggy versions commence to appear in the media wires. It was stated that no foreigners were onboard, and the presence of Australian was discarded. No influenza virus rapid tests positive results were reported. But see below: IOH.
        At this point it is not clear:
        a) type of rapid tests on ILI patients;
        b) the timing of test procedures;
        c) who performed tests;
        d) nationality of passengers;
        e) are there Australian among passenger?
        f) Is the retired doctor really from Britain?
        g) as one can see through FT thread updates, Australian presence was discarded in first instance; no influenza positive patients; no clear command-chain revealed.
        h) is this incident an exercise?
        i) it has really happened or not.

        -
        Tests show no disease outbreak on Canadian train
        Sat May 10, 2008 4:53pm EDT
        TORONTO (Reuters) -

        Lab exams confirmed on Saturday that there was no infectious disease outbreak on a cross-Canada train that was held in quarantine on Friday in northern Ontario after a passenger aboard died.

        "An assessment of all passengers on a VIA Rail train from Vancouver to Toronto has been completed and results confirm that there was no outbreak of infectious disease," Ontario's Ministry of Health said in a statement.

        The train, carrying 264 passengers and 30 crew members, was held for almost 10 hours near the tiny northern Ontario town of Foleyet on Friday after the sudden death of a woman, reported to be in her 60s.

        Another woman on the trip suffered shortness of breath, while five other passengers traveling in a group exhibited influenza-like symptoms, raising suspicions of an outbreak and prompting health officials to quarantine the train.

        Early reports of the death and scenes of emergency workers in hazardous material suits swarming the train brought back grim memories of the 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in Toronto, which killed dozens.

        Some of the group of five passengers were ill before they boarded on May 7 in Jasper, Alberta, and lab results showed four of them tested positive for seasonal flu, officials said.

        "All individuals seated in the vicinity of these five passengers were assessed. None have symptoms of influenza ... Another passenger on the train experiencing flu-like symptoms has tested positive for a cold virus," officials added.

        Lab results for the woman who had displayed shortness of breath and was taken to a hospital near the city of Timmins were also negative for the flu and other respiratory illness.

        The death of the woman is still under investigation, the health ministry said. "But an infectious disease as a cause of death has been ruled out."

        VIA Rail's trans-Canada services are popular with tourists, many of whom board the train in the Pacific Coast city of Vancouver, British Columbia, or in Jasper, Alberta, for the spectacular journey through the Rocky Mountains.

        The train arrived in Toronto on Saturday morning after resuming its journey late Friday afternoon.

        (Writing by Renato Andrade; Editing by Eric Walsh)

        -

        ------

        Comment


        • #94
          Re: Canada: train quarantined; Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

          Indo newsite

          Excerpt:
          Plague/Epidemic to Deaden/Kill: the mysterious illness attacked train passengers
          -snip-
          Several officials stated they did not know the cause of the illness, but the microbiology expert of Donald Low in Mount Sinai Hospital Toronto said to CTV television, he suspected influenza.
          "This very clear pointed in something like influenza..."
          Possibly this the incident was very acute, several individuals were with the disturbance of breathing sick, said Low, that played the important role in the control of the SARS plague (the Pernapasan Akut Parah Syndrome) in Toronto in 2003.
          "We did not speak about SARS, we did not speak about avian influenza."
          We saw the matter as this happened in ships went for a trip and other situations where you saw many gathered people in close limits, said he

          Comment


          • #95
            Re: Canada: train quarantined; Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

            Lab exams confirmed on Saturday that there was no infectious disease outbreak on a cross-Canada train that was held in quarantine on Friday in northern Ontario after a passenger aboard died.
            "An assessment of all passengers on a VIA Rail train from Vancouver to Toronto has been completed and results confirm that there was no outbreak of infectious disease," Ontario's Ministry of Health said in a statement.
            The train, carrying 264 passengers and 30 crew members, was held for almost 10 hours near the tiny northern Ontario town of Foleyet on Friday after the sudden death of a woman, reported to be in her 60s.
            Another woman on the trip suffered shortness of breath, while five other passengers traveling in a group exhibited influenza-like symptoms, raising suspicions of an outbreak and prompting health officials to quarantine the train.
            Early reports of the death and scenes of emergency workers in hazardous material suits swarming the train brought back grim memories of the 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in Toronto, which killed dozens.
            Some of the group of five passengers were ill before they boarded on May 7 in Jasper, Alberta, and lab results showed four of them tested positive for seasonal flu, officials said.
            "All individuals seated in the vicinity of these five passengers were assessed. None have symptoms of influenza ... Another passenger on the train experiencing flu-like symptoms has tested positive for a cold virus," officials added.
            Lab results for the woman who had displayed shortness of breath and was taken to a hospital near the city of Timmins were also negative for the flu and other respiratory illness.
            The death of the woman is still under investigation, the health ministry said. "But an infectious disease as a cause of death has been ruled out."
            VIA Rail's trans-Canada services are popular with tourists, many of whom board the train in the Pacific Coast city of Vancouver, British Columbia, or in Jasper, Alberta, for the spectacular journey through the Rocky Mountains.
            The train arrived in Toronto on Saturday morning after resuming its journey late Friday afternoon.
            <SCRIPT type=text/javascript> digg_url = 'http://javno.com/en/world/clanak.php?id=147468'; digg_bgcolor = '#ff9900'; digg_skin = 'compact'; </SCRIPT><SCRIPT src=" http://digg.com/tools/diggthis.js" type=text/javascript></SCRIPT><IFRAME src="http://digg.com/tools/diggthis.php?u=http%3A//javno.com/en/world/clanak.php%3Fid%3D147468&k=%23ff9900&s=compact" frameBorder=0 width=120 scrolling=no height=18></IFRAME>
            Published: May 11, 2008 11:22h

            Comment


            • #96
              Re: Canada: train quarantined; Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

              Thank you in Ironorehopper and Doctor Niman for your perspicacity. It is important from my point of view to peel this event.

              Comment


              • #97
                Re: Canada: train quarantined; Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

                UNDIAGNOSED ILLNESS, TRAIN - CANADA: (ALBERTA,
                ONTARIO), REQUEST FOR INFORMATION
                ************************************************** ******************************
                A ProMED-mail post
                <http://www.promedmail.org>
                ProMED-mail is a program of the
                International Society for Infectious Diseases
                <http://www.isid.org>

                [1]
                Date: 9 May 2008
                Source: Associated Press [edited]
                <http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gFlSjtUIBDMVj9iFqsaSYEypMdpAD90I9BJO0>


                Train quarantined in Ontario with mystery illness
                -------------------------------------------------
                Canadian authorities quarantined a train in
                northern Ontario Friday [9 May 2008] after a
                woman died and several other people came down
                with an undetermined illness. Officials were
                keeping passengers from leaving the train, said
                Steve Trinier, the director of ambulance services in the area.

                The train was being held in the station in the
                town of Foleyet, 500 miles northwest of Toronto.
                The station was evacuated. As many as 10 people
                were ill with flu-like symptoms. The illnesses
                appeared to be contained to 2 cars on the train
                of 269 passengers and 30 crew members.

                One person was taken to hospital and is in stable
                condition, Trinier said. The cross country Via
                passenger train was headed from Vancouver to
                Toronto when emergency officials received a call
                Friday morning [9 May 2008] and met the train in Foleyet.

                Police constable Marc Depatie told CBC TV there
                were reports that the woman who died was in her
                60s and already had flulike symptoms when she
                boarded the train with a group of tourists in Jasper, Alberta.

                Seven other members of her party were
                experiencing similar but not extreme symptoms, he
                said. Trinier said authorities did not know the cause of the illnesses yet.

                "There's certainly a possibility of something as
                simple as food poisoning and also an
                environmental toxin of some sort," Trinier said.

                Health officials were on the alert for norovirus,
                though they said that has not been identified as
                the cause. Noroviruses cause stomach flu and can
                be caught through contact with infected people or
                by touching or ingesting contaminated items.

                --
                Communicated by:
                ProMED-mail
                <promed@promedmail.org>

                ******
                [2]
                Date: 9 May 2008
                Source: Globe and Mail [edited]
                <http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080509.wtrainnew0509/BNStory/National/home?cid=al_gam_mostemail>


                Woman dies mysteriously on Via train; others sick
                -------------------------------------------------
                With hundreds of passengers aboard, many believed
                to be foreign tourists, a VIA Rail train remained
                under quarantine in a small northern Ontario town
                Friday afternoon [9 May 2008] after a 60-year-old
                woman was found dead in a passenger coach and 6
                others complained of feeling unwell with a
                flu-like ailment. It was unclear, however,
                whether the 2 sets of circumstances were connected.

                "At present we do not believe they're related,"
                Ontario Provincial Police Staff Sergeant Rob Knox said.

                He said the woman became ill on the train and
                subsequently died from an unknown illness. A 2nd
                passenger who has been airlifted to Timmins and
                District Hospital, where she was diagnosed with a
                respiratory illness and listed in stable condition.

                The 5 other ill passengers aboard the train are
                in stable condition and in good spirits, he said.
                The doctor aboard the train who is treating these
                passengers is "not concerned for their immediate health," he added.

                These passengers are in a separate car, isolated
                from others. He said there is no need to evacuate
                anyone from the immediate area surrounding the train.

                "There is no evidence to support an outbreak of
                infectious disease aboard the train," said
                Ontario Chief Medical Officer of Health David
                Williams at a news conference. Mr. Williams said
                there was a confluence of 3 events unrelated to
                each other: the woman who died, the woman over 60
                with a shortness of breath who was airlifted to
                hospital, and 5 tourists travelling together who
                felt ill before they boarded the train in Jasper,
                who were suffering from a viral-type condition.

                He anticipates the train will begin rolling later
                Friday [9 May 2008] en route to Toronto, where it
                is expected to arrive Saturday [10 May 2008] morning.

                A small army of emergency vehicles descended on
                the tiny hamlet Friday morning following reports
                that several passengers were suffering from the
                flu-like symptoms. The train was on its final leg
                of a 3-day trip from Vancouver to Toronto.

                Staff Sgt. Knox said a doctor was on the train
                and had tried to help the victim after she became
                ill from a still-undetermined illness. The woman
                later died, and the doctor turned his attention
                to other passengers who were also unwell but who
                were later described as being in stable condition and in good spirits.

                The doctor said he saw no immediate connection
                between the woman's death and the other
                passengers' illnesses, Staff Sgt. Knox said.

                Officials were obtaining medical documents and
                patient histories in search of clues as to what happened.

                For several hours the emergency triggered
                widespread concern in Foleyet, a town of less
                than 400 people, and only emergency personnel
                wearing full protective gear were being allowed aboard the train.

                "We're just going crazy," said resident Carol
                Woodhouse, who works at a bunkhouse where train
                crews rest and eat. "The rumours are flying,
                people are talking about SARS, nobody knows
                what's going on. Usually we only have 2 policemen
                here, now I think we've got at least 20."

                Ms. Woodhouse estimated the train ­- carrying 246
                passengers and 30 crew -­ consisted of at least
                30 coaches, but the illness is believed to have
                been contained within one or 2 cars. The train
                was halted about 8:35 a.m. after the woman was discovered dead.

                All the communities in which the train made stops
                were under scrutiny, Health Canada spokesman
                Alastair Sinclair said. "Federal officials are
                collaborating with their provincial and regional
                counterparts to assess the situation and take
                action, as appropriate," Mr. Sinclair said. "The
                Minister of Health, Tony Clement, has been
                briefed and has directed his officials to notify
                and liaise with provincial, regional and local
                authorities, both in Foleyet and at all points
                along the route the train travelled. For the
                moment, Ontario is the lead on this."

                Constable Marc Depatie of the OPP said in an
                interview that officials were still trying to
                determine what caused the illnesses on the train
                and how they are linked to the fatality.

                "We don't know if the element is viral or
                bacterial or a case of food poisoning."

                But he echoed Staff Sgt Knox in saying no crisis appeared to be at hand.

                "There is no immediate threat to the persons who
                are either suffering with the flu-like symptoms
                or to other occupants of the train, so there is no emergency sense to this."

                The logistics, however, posed an obstacle,
                Constable Depatie said. "Geography is basically
                working against us because the persons who are
                best equipped to deal with this are miles from a
                small town in northern Ontario." Of the 5
                passengers separated from the others, "They're
                experiencing flu-like symptoms but not to the
                extent that would require immediate extrication."

                Crime-scene investigators from OPP's South
                Porcupine detachment were also on hand but had
                not yet boarded the quarantined train.

                "From an OPP perspective, all sudden deaths are
                deemed to be suspicious in nature until we
                determine the root cause," Constable Depatie
                said. "So with that in mind, our crime unit is at
                the scene taking preliminary information down so
                we can perform an investigation of the event."

                Public health officials in British Columbia and
                Alberta were on standby, awaiting more information from Foleyet.

                Patricia Daly, chief medical health officer for
                Vancouver Coastal Health, said officials had been
                alerted to possible concerns, but it wasn't clear
                if any health threat existed in B.C. or Alberta.

                "We're on standby. We've been advised. They did
                contact us and we're waiting for further
                information," she said. "As soon as we get more
                information we'll know if there is anything we have to do here."

                Nothing amiss was reported in Jasper either,
                Aspen Regional Health Authority spokesman Scott Donaldson said.

                Alberta Health is also investigating, since the
                train travelled across the province, making stops
                in both Jasper and Edmonton on Wednesday [7 May 2008].

                Helen Kelleher-Empey, general manager of Jasper
                Tourism and Commerce, said train travel is
                crucial to the resort town's economy and its 4643
                residents, especially as it gears up for the busy
                summer season when the population explodes.

                "We are shocked and saddened that that someone
                has died," Ms. Kelleher-Empey said

                Foleyet lies about 100 kilometres [62 miles]
                southwest of Timmins. Town chairwoman Deborah
                DesRochers said the scene was initially chaotic as emergency vehicles arrived.

                Others realized something unusual was happening
                when they saw the train stopped at the station
                around 9 a.m., local resident Fernande Dallaire
                said. OPP cruisers, some with sirens blaring,
                cordoned off the local rail yard, she said.

                Judy Bromley saw several ambulances show up and
                watched as a medical helicopter landed nearby and
                airlifted a female passenger away. At one point,
                the OPP ordered the evacuation of a local railway
                rooming house, to turn it into a command centre
                and let healthy passengers use some of the
                30-plus beds there. But the plan was changed and
                passengers remained onboard the train cars.

                Resident John Boudreau said he could see some
                sitting in the train's dining room, calmly having
                a meal. The train was equipped for long-haul
                journeys, with sleeping berths and a fully
                equipped dining room, and it didn't appear to
                have immediate resupply needs, Mr. Boudreau said.

                The normal duration of the Vancouver-Toronto
                journey is 30 minutes short of 3 days, and the
                trip has long been popular with foreign tourists, Ms. Woodhouse said.

                [Byline: Timothy Appleby]

                --
                Communicated by:
                David Fisman, MD MPH FRCPC
                Hospital for Sick Children and Ontario Public Health Lab
                Toronto, Ontario, Canada
                <david.fisman@gmail.com>

                [It is unclear on the basis of the information
                available so far whether the death of the elderly
                passenger was the result of an illness
                (infectious or otherwise) or some other
                consequence, and whether the febrile illness of
                some other passengers is related to this death. Further information is awaited.

                Of note is that there appear to be a mix of
                illnesses going on... apparently some seem to be
                purely respiratory in nature, and others may
                welll be gastrointestinal as norovirus is
                speculated as a causative agent. Clarification
                of the situation would be greatly appreciated.

                The HealthMap/ProMED-mail map of Canada can be
                used to locate the province of Ontario:
                <http://healthmap.org/promed?v=55.4,-101.9,4>;
                and the town of Foleyet can be located in the map at:
                <http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?hl=en&resnum=0&q=Foleyet,+ON,+Canada>.
                - Mods.CP/MPP]
                .................cp/mpp/ejp/mpp

                Comment


                • #98
                  Re: Canada: train quarantined; Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

                  Official Press Release from Friday:

                  Train in Foleyet, Ontario

                  May 9, 2008
                  For Immediate Release
                  Update: Foleyet Train Issue
                  • There is no evidence of an infectious disease outbreak in connection with the death of a passenger on a VIA train en route today from Vancouver to Toronto as determined by federal, provincial and local public health officials.
                  • Another passenger, who was airlifted to Timmins District Hospital, was assessed and is in stable condition. The clinical assessment so far, including lab results, are all negative for the flu and other infectious respiratory illnesses.
                  • Another five passengers who felt ill with mild symptoms and had been isolated are being assessed on board the train. They are also in stable condition.
                  • Health officials have determined that the death of the passenger and the illness of the other six passengers are not related.
                  • Public health officials now are assessing all passengers on the train as a precaution.
                  • The train is expected to resume its journey later today.
                  • The Sudbury District Health Unit is leading the local public health response and is investigating the cause of the passenger death and the other illness.
                  <HR> - 30 -
                  Media Inquiries:
                  Public Health Agency of Canada
                  (613) 948-7970

                  Comment


                  • #99
                    Re: Canada: train quarantined; Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

                    The thread is now closed but I think this last newswire is a breakthrough one. IOH.
                    -
                    Woman who died on VIA train was 43, from South Africa
                    May 11, 2008 11:13 AM
                    THE CANADIAN PRESS

                    Ontario police say the woman who died aboard a Via Rail Train on Friday, setting off a massive biohazard response, was a 43-year-old from South Africa.

                    While a post-mortem examination determined Brenda Buckley's death was the result of natural causes as earlier reports have suggested, there's been much speculation as to her age and country of origin.

                    Authorities had initially given the woman's age as 60, and later said she was 86 years old.

                    Police say six other passengers who reported feeling ill around the same time have since been diagnosed with the common flu.

                    The train from Vancouver remained under quarantine for nine hours Friday in a tiny Northern Ontario town while a hazardous materials medical team determined whether the deceased or ill passengers were infectious.

                    Once it was determined they were not suffering from anything serious, the train continued on to Toronto.

                    Most of the 264 passengers and 30 crew members debarked there Saturday morning, most of them in good spirits despite the ordeal.
                    -
                    thestar.com is one of Canada's largest online news sites and 100% Canadian-owned. Live news, investigations, politics, sports and the heartbeat of Toronto, Canada's largest city.

                    -----

                    link to original Canadian Press story for additional validation -

                    Last edited by sharon sanders; May 11, 2008, 01:01 PM. Reason: added Canadian Press link - thanks IOH

                    Comment


                    • Re: Canada: train quarantined; Thread #2 - Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

                      More about the confusione between passengers:
                      -
                      Breast cancer patient booked trip for 'good dose of happy go lucky'
                      May 10, 2008 04:30 AM
                      Rick Westhead
                      Staff Reporter

                      Aboard Via Rail Train No. 2?Haedy Davidson and her family decided to take a train across Canada, soaking in the scenic Rocky Mountains and frothy northern rivers, because they "needed a good dose of happy-go-lucky."
                      Davidson, who suffers from Stage IV breast cancer, got more than she bargained for.

                      The Vancouver native was among some 264 passengers who were left in limbo yesterday aboard a Via train quarantined in Foleyet, a secluded logging town west of Timmins.

                      Passengers didn't learn that a 60-year-old woman had died aboard the train early yesterday until 6 p.m. ? and only then when the news squawked over a train employee's radio.
                      There was no cellphone service, no Internet connection, no connection with the outside world.

                      By midnight, passengers were sprawled across the aisles, pillows and blankets were scattered, and patience was running short ? a sharp contrast to how the day started.

                      "We were all in pretty good spirits for a lot of the morning," said Chloe Elias, 19, adding she and a friend watched movies on a computer.

                      But as the day progressed, some passengers said they were frustrated by the lack of information given by Via staff.

                      "We didn't know we could have free water until we asked for it," said Elise Pettit of Victoria. "When it came to beer, we still had to pay $5 a can."

                      Some passengers also said they were upset that in Foleyet, where the train was quarantined, smokers were briefly allowed outside. Non-smokers had to stay on-board, Pettit said.

                      Davidson, who passed time listening to an iPod and talking with her husband and two sons, 27 and 16, said her most frustrating moment came when a leaflet was distributed at about midnight from the Sudbury public health unit.

                      Under the heading "What is known," the brochure said: "There is no evidence of an infectious disease outbreak in connection with the death of a passenger on the Via Rail train en route today from Vancouver to Toronto."

                      "This is just propaganda," said Davidson, adding she began rationing morphine at about 2 p.m.

                      "They're just covering their asses. I understand protocol and medical emergencies. Especially since SARS, we have to err on the side of extreme caution. But not to be able to tell us we'll be here another five or seven hours, to just keep us in the dark, is wrong."

                      While sick passengers were isolated in a car "in lockdown," according one staff member, rumours spread as the train passed Sudbury that at least one other passenger was sick. A boy, about 9, was wrapped in a red blanket and briefly taken off the train at Sudbury for air. "He has anxiety attacks," his mother told train staff. "He needs fresh air and a banana."

                      The train was stopped in Foleyet at about 9 a.m., just after staff served breakfasts of poached eggs, hash browns and coffee. Lunch ? turkey club and tuna sandwiches ? was served between 1 and 3 p.m. Staff served dinner, too. Pot roast or grilled salmon cost $11.50 and barbecue chicken was $11. None of the meals was complementary.

                      "Some people were only planning to be on the train for a fixed time," Pettit said. "I don't have the money to pay $11 each for three meals a day."

                      She said providing passengers with complimentary food "would have been the right thing to do."

                      Via Rail's crisis management came under fire even from someone in the business.

                      Kevin Pashkewicz, a CN Rail conductor from Smithers, B.C., said he couldn't believe the dearth of information from train staff.

                      "They're dancing around," he said. "They're not really telling everybody anything. We're upstairs watching helicopters landing (near the train) and they're not saying anything more. They're tiptoeing."

                      Told of passengers' concerns about the lack of information, a Via Rail train employee declined to comment. "I can't tell you anything," he said.

                      -

                      ------

                      Comment


                      • Re: Canada: train quarantined; Thread #2 - Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

                        This recent situation in Canada has some similarities to the recent deaths in northern Minnesota from influenza. In both cases there was uncertainty whether these patients had been reliably screened for H5N1. Many rapid and Elisa tests which are common in North America are not very sensitive for H5N1 and it is often unclear if even in highly suspect cases such as these that more reliable pcr testing is being done. In Canada it probably was, the Minnesota situation appeared to garner much less interest and even though autopsies were apparently done the full level of influenza testing done was not revealed.

                        In Canada there was the added problem that originally the rapid tests on 4 patients were apparently negative but later testing was positive for influenza A. This would make identification and release of the precise serotype even more important.

                        Also the age of 43 of the fatal case also makes the situation more worrisome and important to accurately identify the cause and release the information to the public.

                        The public deserves better than this. Hopefully public health is actually performing better than this.


                        Created on: 03/20/2008 06:47:42 PM
                        By: Renee Passal

                        Health Officials Investigating Two Flu-like Illness Deaths in Same Family

                        The Minnesota Department of Health is investigating the deaths of two rural Itasca County men. Authorities say they had flu-like symptoms, but may have died from secondary bacterial infections. Both are from Dora Lake, which is in Itasca County, west of Bigfork.

                        Dan "Barney" Adams Jr., 45, died on Sunday at Bigfork Valley Hospital. Three days later, his father, Rev. Dan Adams Sr. died at St. Mary's Medical Center in Duluth. His age is unknown.

                        Adams Jr. owned and operated Barney's On The Bowstring resort and hunting guide service. He leaves behind a wife and two children. Adams Jr. also ran for Itasca County Commissioner back in 2006. His friend, Phil Padgett, said Adams was a kind-hearted man, who was always there to help you.

                        Adams Sr. was the pastor of Good News Bible Church in Dora Lake and in Cohasset.

                        Health officials say the two deaths in one family is devastating, but not a reason to panic. The DOH estimates about 800 people in Minnesota die from the flu each year, most of them over the age of 65. The flu season runs through April. To prevent the spread of the disease, good hygiene is encouraged. Flu shots are also still available.

                        Comment


                        • Re: Canada: train quarantined; Thread #2 - Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

                          Source: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servl.../National/home

                          Blood clot caused Via rider's death, police say

                          COLIN FREEZE

                          From Monday's Globe and Mail

                          May 12, 2008 at 4:04 AM EDT

                          TORONTO ? A short-lived pandemic scare, one that caused a train to be quarantined last Friday, actually resulted from a sedentary passenger's fatal blood clot, police have told The Globe and Mail.

                          Brenda Buckley, a 43-year-old South African tourist travelling alone on a cross-Canada rail journey, died from a pulmonary embolism, authorities say. The condition, the worst-case outcome of a lesser malady known to travellers as deep-vein thrombosis, can result from protracted periods of sitting.

                          The condition has been known to arise on long-haul flights, but many observers are surprised it is being linked to rail travel. "This is not a condition Via [Rail] has ever encountered on any of its trains," Catherine Kaloutsky, a spokeswoman for the company, said last night. She said Via Rail doesn't warn passengers about the risk of thrombosis, but will review practices.

                          The rarity of the condition on train journeys may have contributed to the case's initial aura of inexplicability, which fuelled the infectious-disease speculation that garnered global headlines.

                          The Ontario Provincial Police say a host of factors conspired to cause police to fear the worst. Ms. Buckley's death while travelling through Northern Ontario on Friday coincided with another passenger being airlifted to hospital after complaining of a severe respiratory problem. Five other passengers were also complaining of flu-like symptoms.

                          By Saturday, it was clear that all of the cases had arisen independently. Authorities issued a statement saying the five passengers were "afflicted by a common flu virus," the airlifted woman had a history of breathing difficulties, and that Ms. Buckley had "died of natural causes."

                          Yesterday, The Globe asked an investigating OPP officer to elaborate on the kinds of natural causes that could kill a 43-year-old. The death was "due to a pulmonary embolism," Detective Sergeant Michael Pilon responded.

                          He explained that after an autopsy in Sudbury, a pathologist told him that the condition can result from someone "sitting in a car for a long period of time, or, in this case, sitting in a train."

                          Little is known about Ms. Buckley, whose age had been estimated by some fellow passengers as about 20 years older than that listed in her passport. She had provided the travel agency with the name of a sister in South Africa as next of kin. "It came as a shock to the family," said Det. Sgt. Pilon, who notified relatives.

                          The South African tourist had booked her Canadian trip through Trafalgar Tours, a company that promotes the "breathtaking scenery" of the Rockies, including their "snow-capped peaks, hanging glaciers, pounding waterfalls and surging rivers."

                          Ms. Buckley had already spent several days on a train before crossing into Alberta from British Columbia last week. She boarded another train in Jasper, and had nearly completed the two-day trip to Sudbury when she began complaining of shortness of breath. "It was a very sudden event," Det. Sgt. Pilon said.

                          In the past, airline agents have been forced to deal with similar incidents. "It may be we will see something like that two, three, four times a year with air traffic," said William Lucas, a coroner for the province of Ontario. In an interview yesterday, he said he has never heard of any such case arising on a train. He expressed surprise, given that there is "a greater freedom of mobility on the train than there is on an airplane."

                          Blood circulation is often dependant on the mechanics of walking, Dr. Lucas said, explaining that active leg muscles set about "squeegeeing, like toothpaste, your blood back into circulation."

                          Long periods of sitting cause the blood to pool in the legs and possibly coagulate into clots. Should a clot become dislodged from the legs and travel up to arteries that feed the lungs, it can spell disaster.

                          A funeral home in Timmins, Ont., was making arrangements to send Ms. Buckley's body back to South Africa.

                          Comment


                          • Re: Canada: train quarantined; Thread #2 - Flu Trackers Team Follow-Up

                            Source: http://www.timminspress.com/ArticleD...aspx?e=1030519

                            Inactivity derailed train trip
                            Posted By Brandon Walker
                            Posted -56 sec ago

                            The woman who was airlifted from a train stopped in Foleyet to the Timmins and District Hospital last Friday felt shortness of breath from sitting too long, doctors said.

                            Carolyn Clarke, 69, said doctors at Timmins and District Hospital told her she had multiple blood clots in her legs, which ended up scattered throughout her lungs.

                            "That's what caused the pain," she explained from her hospital bed at TDH. "The blood clot stopped blood from getting to my lungs."

                            She and her husband James believe the fear of a pandemic saved her life.

                            "Had it not been for that, the response might've been slower," she said.

                            A retired doctor, Paul Bishop, assisted Brenda Buckley, who was also experiencing shortness of breath, and five Australians in another train car who were experiencing flu-like symptoms.


                            "The blood clot stopped blood from getting to my lungs."

                            Carolyn Clarke

                            Buckley, a South African, died as a result of sitting for too long. After an autopsy in Sudbury, a pathologist report said the 43-year-old most likely experienced deep-vein thrombosis, resulting from inactivity.

                            Det. Sgt. Michael Pilon of the Ontario Provincial Police said the blood sometimes clots and accumulates in the legs.

                            Once there is activity, the clotted blood can travel into the arteries that feed the lungs. The result can be a very sudden death. Clarke believes people should be made more aware of what can occur during all forms of travel.


                            While on the train, staff told "us to walk around but the corridors are very narrow. It's easy to just sit and look out the window. They do encourage us to get up during stops and walk around."

                            The retired doctor is from the U.K. and was travelling with the Clarkes and others during a multiple-day International Food and Wine Society trip that started in Atlanta.

                            The group got on the Via Rail train at Jasper, Alta., but it wasn't until shortly before 9 a.m. on Friday when all of the different circumstances led to it being quarantined in Foleyet, with fears of a possible pandemic.


                            Clarke was airlifted to TDH at around 11 a.m. on May 9, while her husband was airlifted later that day.

                            The couple was scheduled to fly out of Timmins on Thursday afternoon to Toronto. Clarke had an oxygen tank with her just to be sure she wasn't negatively effected by the pressure change from flying.

                            They hope to fly out of Toronto as soon as possible and head home to Cheshire, England, about 320 kilometres north of London.

                            "I just wanted to give thanks to this wonderful little town of Timmins," James said.
                            Article ID# 1030519

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