Where exactly are N.B.'s mystery neurological disease cases? Public health agencies won't say - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 11:26 AM | Calgary | -13.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Where exactly are N.B.'s mystery neurological disease cases? Public health agencies won't say

Public Health officials won't reveal specifically where in New Brunswick more than 40 cases of a mystery neurological disease have been identified, citing the "sensitive" and "confidential" nature of the information.

Green Party leader blasts Health Department for 'concealing' information, letting fear take hold

Bertrand Mayor Yvon Godin, who is head of the Forum of Acadian Peninsula Mayors, says residents are 'very, very worried' about the mystery disease identified on the peninsula and in the Moncton area. (Radio-Canada)

Public Health officials won't reveal specifically where in New Brunswick more than 40 cases of a mystery neurological disease have been identified, citing the "sensitive" and "confidential" nature of the information.

News last week that a cluster of cases of an unknown neurological disease hasbeen found in New Brunswick immediately had residents of several communities on edge.

Identified as a cluster in 2020, a first case was retroactively identified in 2015,according to a Public Health memosent this month to medical professionals.

The disease appears to be concentrated in the Acadian Peninsula in northeast New Brunswick and the Moncton region in the southeast.Forty-three caseshave been identified, and five people have died.

Although the mystery illness has similarities toCreutzfeldt-Jakob disease, known asCJD, a rare and fatal brain disease, the memo noted that"testing for CJD so far has ruled out known prion diseases."

But there's been little further information provided by Public Health, and on Saturday,peninsula mayors said the lack of information has fuelled rampant speculation.

"We are very, very worried about it," said Yvon Godin, the mayor ofBertrand, a village at the northern tip of the peninsula.

"Residents are anxious, they're asking 'Is it moose meat? Is it deer? Is it contagious?' We need to know, as fast as possible, what is causing this disease."

On Monday, Green Party Leader David Coon blasted Public Health's handling of the cases on several levels, saying it's "unacceptable that information involving the health of so many people is being concealed."

Green Party Leader David Coon said Public Health should hold a briefing to let New Brunswickers know what's going on, rather than 'concealing' information and allowing fear to fester. (Jacques Poitras/CBC file photo)

'Why are we only hearing about this cluster now?'

Researchers started to gather a year ago to look at this, Coon said.

He noted that the case numbers took a jump in 2019, when 11 cases were identified, and again in 2020, when24 cases were identified.

"So why are New Brunswickers only hearing about this cluster now?" Coonsaid."It's extraordinary to me that Public Health has been so quiet on this they haven't done anything to keep us informed."

Coon said Memramcook-Tantramar Green Party MLA Megan Mitton has already asked questions about this in the legislature, and his partywill continue to press for more information.

"When there's a lack of information, you get fear," he said.

"That's not what we want. They need to be transparent, they need to tell people how are these cases distributed, in which areas of the province specifically,they need to provide a public briefing. Let people know what's the state of the research Let us all in on what's going on."

Chief Medical Health Officer Dr. Jennifer Russell has said that 35 of the 43 cases are on the Acadian Peninsula but has not provided further details about where, specifically, they were identified. (Submitted by the Government of New Brunswick)

35 of the 43 cases are on Acadian Peninsula

Dr. Jennifer Russell, the province's chief medical office of health, has said that 35 of the cases are on the Acadian Peninsula, which encompasses about 14 towns and villages. Eight suspected cases are in the Moncton area.

The provincial Public Health department has not responded to requests for information about where, specifically, in the northeast or theMoncton area the cases have been identified.

And on Monday, the senior scientist heading up the federal arm of the investigation said he could not provide specific information either.

"That is very sensitive information, especially in a very small jurisdiction, population-wise, such as New Brunswick," Michael Coulthart said in an interview. "I can tell you that is available to us but we cannot share it further."

Coulthart is the director of federal Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Surveillance System, which is providingsupport to New Brunswick's own investigation of the cluster. Hesaid he wanted to assure anxious New Brunswickers that experts across the country are working to getto the root cause.

"We're undertaking this investigation with all possible vigour and consulting with a wide range of experts, and all of the kinds of expertise that we need are available in Canada.

While federal teams won't be coming to New Brunswick to investigate the cluster, they will be, at New Brunswick's request, "providing support in any way we can," including state-of-the-art lab services and expertise in neurological disease, Coulthart said.


N.B.'s mystery disease: What we know so far

What is it?

  • An unknown neurological disease withsimilarities toCreutzfeldt-Jakob disease, a rare and fatal brain disease

When was it discovered?

  • A single case was retroactively identifiedin 2015.Three years later, in 2019, 11 additional cases were discovered, with 24 more cases discoveredin 2020 and another sixin 2021. Five people have died.

When was it made public?

  • A March 5 internal memo from Public Health to health-care professionals was obtained by Radio-Canada and reported by Radio-Canada and CBC News on Wednesday, March 17.

Where are the cases?

  • The disease has so far only been identified in New Brunswick.It appears to be concentrated on the Acadian Peninsula in northeast New Brunswick and the Moncton region in the southeast.

How many cases are there?

  • Forty-three cases have been identified. Of those, 35 are on the Acadian Peninsula and eight are in the Moncton region.

Who has been affected?

  • The disease affects all age groups and affects males and females equally, according to the Public Health memo. About half of theaffected individuals are between 50 and 69 years of age.

What are the symptoms?

  • Symptoms include changes in behaviour, sleep disturbances, unexplained pain, visual hallucinations, co-ordination problems and severe muscle and brain atrophy.

Is it contagious?

  • Because the cause has not been determined, it is not yet known whether the disease is contagious.

What are the possible causes being researched?

  • Despite many similarities, tests for Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease have so far ruled out known prion diseases.
  • Scientists are currently looking into the possibility that this is a new variant of a prion disease or a new disease entirely.
  • Neurologists and scientists suspect the cause might be exposure to an as-yet-undetermined environmental toxin.

Who's researching it?

  • The disease is the subject of investigation by an all-Canadian team of neurologists, epidemiologists, scientists, researchers and other experts.
  • Here in New Brunswick, Moncton neurologist Dr. Alier Marrero is leading the research. In Ottawa, senior scientist and Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Surveillance System director Michael Coulthart is leading the research.

Corrections

  • This story has been updated from an earlier version to reflect that the Creutzfeldt-Jakob Surveillance System clarified on April 7 that the 2015 case wasn't identified that year, but retroactively in 2020.
    Apr 07, 2021 12:07 PM AT

With files from Nicolas Steinbach/Radio-Canada