Canadian public health officials closed their investigation into the teenager who became critically ill with the H5N1 bird ...
Bonnie Henry, the B.C. provincial officer of health, will host a press conference at 11 a.m. Tuesday to provide an update on ...
The teen remains in critical condition in BC Children's Hospital, and Henry said an extensive investigation had yet to find a ...
However, in the Canadian teen's case, all of the pets they came into contact with tested negative, said Bonnie Henry, a ...
Efforts to contain the virus are falling short. A teenager in Canada is in critical condition after an unexplained infection.
It's not clear how the teenager picked up the virus, which has been detected recently in wild birds and poultry in the province, said Dr. Bonnie Henry, provincial health officer. The teen is not ...
"This young person has received the best possible care from the clinical team at B.C. Children’s (Hospital) and is stable, ...
The previously healthy British Columbia teen went to a hospital emergency room Nov. 2 with initial symptoms of pink eye, fever and cough, conditions common to many respiratory illnesses, Bonnie Henry, ...
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 ...