this post was submitted on 11 Nov 2025
5 points (100.0% liked)

Medicine Canada

315 readers
1 users here now

A community for Canadian physicians and medical professionals


๐Ÿ While this community is intended for Canadian discussions, you are free to post about other medical systems. We're all in this together :)



Related Communities

For better links and descriptions, see the pinned post in the Medical Community Hub (!medicine@lemmy.world)


Rules

  1. No requests for professional advice or general medical information. Please do not solicit medical advice or share personal health anecdotes about yourself or others.

  2. No promotions, advertisements, surveys, or petitions.

  3. Link to high-quality, original research whenever possible: Posts which rely on or reference scientific data (e.g. an announcement about a medical breakthrough) should link to the original research in peer-reviewed medical journals or respectable news sources as judged by the moderators. Sensationalized titles, misrepresentation of results, or promotion of blatantly bad science may lead to removal.

  4. Act professionally and decently: /r/medicine is a public forum that represents the medical community and comments should reflect this. Please keep disagreement civil and focused on issues.

  5. Protect patient confidentiality. Please anonymize cases and remove any patient-identifiable information.

  6. No memes or low-effort posts: Memes, image links (including social media screenshots), images of text, or other low-effort posts or comments are not allowed.

These rules have been modelled after /r/medicine. While some rules were modified or skipped as this is a much smaller community, we can revisit the rules as we go. Thank you :)

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

A dose of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccination at Southwestern Public Health in St. Thomas, Ont. The highly contagious, airborne disease totalled more than 5,100 cases over the past year.

Measles, a virus considered to have been eliminated in Canada in 1998, has made a comeback in this country.

On Monday, the Pan American Health Organization, a regional arm of the World Health Organization, declared that Canada has lost its measles elimination status after failing to interrupt transmission within one year of an outbreak.


From The Globe and Mail via this RSS feed

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here