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Found 10 records similar to 2020 - Measles and Rubella Weekly Monitoring Reports
Weekly surveillance reports and monitoring maps for measles and rubella in Canada. As a nationally reportable disease in Canada, surveillance of measles is conducted by public health professionals in provinces and territories. They report cases to the Government of Canada (GC) through systems at the federal level. Cases are reported by health care providers to public health units if the patient presents with symptoms and are laboratory-confirmed or has a known link to a laboratory-confirmed case.
Weekly surveillance reports and monitoring maps for measles and rubella in Canada. As a nationally reportable disease in Canada, surveillance of measles is conducted by public health professionals in provinces and territories. They report cases to the Government of Canada (GC) through systems at the federal level. Cases are reported by health care providers to public health units if the patient presents with symptoms and are laboratory-confirmed or has a known link to a laboratory-confirmed case.
Weekly surveillance reports and monitoring maps for measles and rubella in Canada. As a nationally reportable disease in Canada, surveillance of measles is conducted by public health professionals in provinces and territories. They report cases to the Government of Canada (GC) through systems at the federal level. Cases are reported by health care providers to public health units if the patient presents with symptoms and are laboratory-confirmed or has a known link to a laboratory-confirmed case.
Weekly surveillance reports and monitoring maps for measles and rubella in Canada. As a nationally reportable disease in Canada, surveillance of measles is conducted by public health professionals in provinces and territories. They report cases to the Government of Canada (GC) through systems at the federal level. Cases are reported by health care providers to public health units if the patient presents with symptoms and are laboratory-confirmed or has a known link to a laboratory-confirmed case.
Weekly surveillance reports and monitoring maps for measles and rubella in Canada. As a nationally reportable disease in Canada, surveillance of measles is conducted by public health professionals in provinces and territories. They report cases to the Government of Canada (GC) through systems at the federal level. Cases are reported by health care providers to public health units if the patient presents with symptoms and are laboratory-confirmed or has a known link to a laboratory-confirmed case.
Weekly surveillance reports and monitoring maps for measles and rubella in Canada. As a nationally reportable disease in Canada, surveillance of measles is conducted by public health professionals in provinces and territories. They report cases to the Government of Canada (GC) through systems at the federal level. Cases are reported by health care providers to public health units if the patient presents with symptoms and are laboratory-confirmed or has a known link to a laboratory-confirmed case.
Weekly surveillance reports and monitoring maps for measles and rubella in Canada. As a nationally reportable disease in Canada, surveillance of measles is conducted by public health professionals in provinces and territories. They report cases to the Government of Canada (GC) through systems at the federal level. Cases are reported by health care providers to public health units if the patient presents with symptoms and are laboratory-confirmed or has a known link to a laboratory-confirmed case.
FluWatch is Canada's national surveillance system that monitors the spread of flu and flu-like illnesses on an on-going basis. Activity Level surveillance is a component of FluWatch that provides an overall assessment of the intensity and geographical spread of laboratory-confirmed influenza cases, influenza-like-illness (ILI) and reported outbreaks for a given surveillance region. Activity Levels are assigned and reported by Provincial and Territorial Ministries of Health. A surveillance region can be classified under one of the four following categories: no activity, sporadic, localized or widespread.
The Canada Communicable Disease Report is a bilingual, open-access, peer-reviewed journal on the prevention and control of emerging and persistent infectious diseases.
Measles, a serious and highly contagious childhood disease, was once common in Canada.