News/Canada/Montreal

An 18-year-old boxer died after a knockout in Montreal. The fight should’ve never happened
Health, News/Canada/Montreal

An 18-year-old boxer died after a knockout in Montreal. The fight should’ve never happened

At the end of the fourth round in a six-round fight on Aug. 28, 2021, Jeanette Zacarias Zapata went into convulsions.A left uppercut and a right hook from her opponent were among the string of punches that had become too much to overcome for the 18-year-old Mexican boxer.Her trainer, on-site paramedics and a doctor assigned to the event rushed into the ring to assist her as she lay unconscious at Montreal's IGA stadium.It was Zapata's sixth — and last — professional fight. She died five days later at Sacré-Coeur-de-Montréal Hospital.Her death came three and a half months after she had suffered a concussion in a knockout loss in her home country."This interview is really difficult for me," Irene Zapata, the deceased boxer's mother, told Radio-Canada's Enquête investigative team, while sitti...
Quebec measles outbreaks linked to declining vaccination rates
Health, News/Canada/Montreal

Quebec measles outbreaks linked to declining vaccination rates

Measles is making a comeback in Quebec, with public health officials warning hockey fans about a possible exposure at a recent Montreal Canadiens' game.From December to March in the province, at least 31 cases were reported and experts point to one cause — declining vaccination rates."The unifying theme for all of these places as to why measles is causing outbreaks or is out of control is very simple: low vaccination rates," said Dr. Donald Vinh, an infectious disease specialist at the McGill University Health Centre (MUHC).Data from Quebec public health, obtained by Radio-Canada, shows vaccination rates declined during the COVID-19 pandemic."It's true that during the pandemic, there was difficulty of access. And access is really the key to making vaccination as easy as possible for parent...
Life has gone back to normal. But those with long COVID continue to suffer
Health, News/Canada/Montreal

Life has gone back to normal. But those with long COVID continue to suffer

When Nathanael Rafinejad first moved to Montreal, they loved the city's nightlife and worked as a bartender and a waiter while studying business management.But after catching COVID-19 in January 2022, the 29-year-old is now mostly confined to their apartment."I feel completely cut off from the world most of the time," said Rafinejad. "I can't walk anymore. I cannot stand for more than a few seconds at a time. I can't sit for a long time. I have to use a wheelchair every day."Rafinejad is one of thousands of Quebecers with long COVID, a chronic condition that can prevent once healthy, active people from functioning properly.Rafinejad is worried they'll never get better.When they first got sick, it initially felt like the flu. But by the fourth day, the fatigue was so intense, Rafinejad said...
The world has moved on. But those who lost loved ones to COVID-19 feel stuck in time
Health, News/Canada/Montreal

The world has moved on. But those who lost loved ones to COVID-19 feel stuck in time

It's been almost five years, but family members of Canadians who died of COVID-19 in the first year of the pandemic often feel as if they are frozen in 2020.It pains them that they couldn't hold the hands of their parents, siblings, spouses and friends in the final moments of their lives. Instead, they said goodbye over speaker phone, or through a glass window. They watched as body bags were wheeled out of long-term care homes, and some held modest funerals outside as it snowed.Ahead of the five-year anniversary of the World Health Organization declaring a global pandemic on March 11, The Canadian Press spoke to five people who lost someone they loved as the virus started circulating in those frightening early days.Since then, more than 60,000 people have died of COVID-19 in Canada based o...
The legacy of Quebec’s controversial pandemic curfew
Health, News/Canada/Montreal

The legacy of Quebec’s controversial pandemic curfew

Five years after the first reported COVID-19 case in Quebec, the province's curfew remains controversial — more than half the fines are unpaid, legal battles continue and health experts still debate whether the benefits outweighed the costs.Quebec was the only province to prohibit its citizens from leaving their homes at night during the pandemic.Premier François Legault's Coalition Avenir Québec government imposed a nightly curfew on two separate occasions.Was it worth it? Dr. Horacio Arruda, who was the province's director of public health when the curfews were imposed, said it was a necessary move at the time."We needed it because of the indicators of the health-care system, the numbers of people who were getting sick," Arruda said in a recent interview with CBC News."For me, a curfew i...