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    Home»Conditions»How Canada’s vaccine infrastructure has helped guard against infectious disease during the FIFA World Cup
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    How Canada’s vaccine infrastructure has helped guard against infectious disease during the FIFA World Cup

    stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comBy stamilhstgr0518@gmail.comJuly 12, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    How Canada’s vaccine infrastructure has helped guard against infectious disease during the FIFA World Cup
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    Canadian fans gather at Jack Poole Plaza in Vancouver on July 4, 2026, to watch Canada play Morocco during a World Cup round of 16 soccer match.
    THE CANADIAN PRESS/Ethan Cairns

    As World Cup fans cheer at the quarterfinals, concerns remain about the health of Norway’s players, several of whom are recovering from what turned out to be mild illness. Other international players had expressed concern earlier about measles in the Americas

    The tournament has highlighted risks related to the volume and fluidity of global travel. From Norway’s elite, handsomely paid squad to the millions of fans congregating at Fan Fests across Canada and the Americas, the quadrennial tournament exposes our interconnected health vulnerabilities

    The back of a person's head, wearing a cap, in a stadium full of people while giant flags are formed on the field.
    The back of the author’s son’s cap as he watches Les Bleus play Paraguay in Philadelphia, Pa., on July 4, showing the magnitude of people gathering in stadiums across North America.
    (Brian Weeks), Author provided (no reuse)

    It’s health security that makes this vibrant bustle possible. As we embrace strangers and shower drinks on neighbours — my 12-year-old son, a Fan Fest regular, particularly appreciates this tradition — Public Health Agency of Canada assesses passengers who appear sick in order to catch exposures to contagious diseases like measles and tuberculosis (TB)

    As an American public health scientist working in Canada for the summer, I recently learned about significant preventive health investments, including monitoring for disease risks and major new infrastructure to protect residents from future threats

    Airborne risks

    Infectious diseases often spread through air travel. In 2010, two travellers from separate parts of the world brought measles with them to the 2010 Vancouver Olympics. The cases seeded a wave of community transmission in the province — meaning measles spread through local cases versus international exposures — with 82 cases reported in two months

    Fast forward to the 2026 World Cup. Canadian public health professionals have been monitoring anonymized electronic medical records, wastewater and public social media accounts for outbreak clues in order to head off widespread community transmission. Rapid communication to provincial residents about flight-related exposures, includinger-present risks

    a colourful illustration shows people talking in silhouette around a yellow bacteria
    Immunity and Society, a new series from The Conversation Canada in partnership with the Bridge Research Consortium.

    Immunity and Society is a new series from The Conversation Canada that presents new vaccine discoveries and immune-based innovations that are changing how we understand and protect human health. Through a partnership with the Bridge Research Consortium, these articles — written by experts in Canada at the forefront of immunology, biomanufacturing, social science and humanities — explore the latest developments and their impacts

    As Australia and Turkey faced off at Vancouver’s B.C. Place stadium on June 13, measles was travelling on a plane from Toronto, triggering a half-dozen exposures at Ontario and Québec airports and clinics that these provinces quickly announced. Public health professionals have reported 28 measles cases since late June in Québec, in the province’s third measles outbreak since early 2024. Seven provinces have also reported cases in 2026

    While public health workers actively mitigated exposures through contact tracing, quarantining sick people, and clear and prompt public communication, the threat of continued community transmission remains a concern

    Turkey’s Ismail Yuksek (16) and Australia’s Nestory Irankunda (17) vie for control of the ball during a group D World Cup soccer game in Vancouver on June 13, 2026.
    THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

    Canada’s $2.5-billion ground game

    Primary prevention averts disease before it ever occurs. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, Canada has made significant investments to build domestic biomanufacturing, vaccine and therapeutics production, including partnerships with pharmaceutical companies

    Moderna’s mRNA vaccine production facility in Laval, Québec, opened in 2024 and focuses on RSV, flu and COVID-19 vaccines. Sanofi’s vaccine manufacturing facility in Toronto will produce vaccines against whooping cough (pertussis), diphtheria and tetanus in a facility the size equivalent of two-and-a-half FIFA soccer pitches. A second Sanofi facility is scheduled to begin producing flu vaccines in 2027

    In Edmonton, the Canadian Critical Drug Initiative will support a 40,000-square-foot manufacturing plant, which received $50 million in federal funding and aims to ensure a reliable drug and biodefence supply. Additional investments will enable institutions in Winnipeg, Saskatoon and Calgary to accelerate Canadian discovery in the life sciences

    These new production sites will help ensure prioritized access to critical vaccines and therapeutics for Canadians while expanding global supply. While this current wave of investment is rapid, it recalls Canadian innovations of the 19th and 20th centuries

    • Farm to front: During the First World War, an Ontario farm managed by Connaught Laboratories produced vaccines and immunological serums, protecting Canadian soldiers deployed to the Western Front against diseases like smallpox, tetanus and meningococcus (a cause of debilitating meningitis)

    • Québec’s Pasteur: After losing his mother to tuberculosis (TB), Montréal scientist Dr. Armand Frappier dedicated his life to the discovery of public health solutions, including proving how the BCG (Bacillus Calmette–Guérin) vaccine prevented TB, the first such trial in North America of the early 20th century

    • Bottle rocker: In 1952–53, Connaught Laboratories microbiologist Leone Farrell, PhD helped Jonas Salk mass-produce polio vaccine materials through “bottle-rocking machines.” Her bottle-rocker, which provided for 2.3 million polio vaccine doses to Canadians and was featured in a museum exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., provided hope during a time when polio infected thousands and killed hundreds each year

    Polio cases surged sporadically in Canada up through the 1950s. As the historic chart shows, in one August, 1959, there were over 500 polio cases. 1953 was the worst year with 5384 cases. As the polio vaccine reached more people, the number of annual cases dropped to the single digits by the early 1960s. The last case of wild poliovirus acquired in Canada was in 1977.
    (Statistics Canada)

    Crowds, travel and infectious disease risk

    In an era of conflict and sectarianism, the World Cup offers extraordinary international togetherness. My son and fans from across the globe clustered for hours in the searing sun, cheering home wins, mourning losses and celebrating victories of other nations after each fan’s own country exited the bracket

    As Canada closes out its inaugural role as co-host, it will have successfully welcomed over a million international visitors. Its public health vigilance has paid off with scant transmission of measles and other contagious illness around the tournament

    The Cup has highlighted Canada’s strong public health infrastructure, but the volume of international visitors arriving for the tournament is fairly similar to what the country handles during a typical midsummer travel peak

    In a typical July, about 1.4 million international non-residents arrive by air in Canada, alongside nearly two million vehicular crossings from the United States. So even after the teams and fans depart, travel-related infectious disease risks remain ever-present

    As the World Cup crowds disperse after a tournament that successfully averted disease transmission, it’s important that Canada remains prepared for whatever infectious disease threat may appear next

    Canadas Guard Helped infrastructure vaccine
    stamilhstgr0518@gmail.com
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    Women over 30, especially mothers, face these 5 common health problems: Doctor says early prevention can make all the difference

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