A disease that is more commonly associated with the trenches of the First World War, and can sometimes be found in refugee camps, has been detected in several patients in Alberta who received organ transplants.

Bartonella quintana, an infection caused by body lice, has been found in seven organ transplant recipients in Alberta since 2022, according to Dr. Dima Kabbani, a transplant infectious disease physician who treated the patients.

“It was quite alarming to us, especially that we know that this bacteria can cause a more serious type of infection because sometimes it can affect your heart valve or it can affect some of the major organs,” Kabbani said.

The disease, which presents as skin lesions, was transferred to organ recipients from their donors, all of whom were people who had been living with homelessness and who had been infected themselves.

  • HellsBelle@sh.itjust.worksOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    19 days ago

    Or just Canada’s in general?

    According to a report published in the Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine, if recently published analyses of weekly deaths attributable to emergency overcrowding in the United Kingdom hold true in Canada — and there’s no reason they shouldn’t, given Canada’s crowding statistics are even worse than Britain’s — an estimated 8,000 to 15,000 Canadians are dying each year as a result of hospital overcrowding.

    … keeping in mind that Ottawa added billions in healthcare transfers, even tho not one province signed onto an agreement that the extra money would go ONLY to heathcare.