Canadian Paediatric Immunization Awareness

The Need

The Need

Vaccine-Preventable Diseases Are Still a Real Threat

Diseases that vaccines can prevent continue to harm children and communities around the world — and in Canada. Understanding the threat is the first step toward protecting those we love.

View All Diseases — Canada.ca

Why This Matters

Vaccination doesn't just protect individuals — it shields entire communities, including those too young or too vulnerable to be immunized themselves.

  • Measles can cause brain damage and death
  • Polio can cause permanent paralysis
  • Pertussis kills infants under 1 year
  • Meningitis can strike within 24 hours
  • These diseases still circulate globally today
Global Impact

The Scale of the Problem

20+
Life-threatening diseases vaccines can prevent
4–5M
Deaths prevented by vaccines every year globally
95%
Herd immunity threshold needed to stop measles spread
↑ Rising
Measles cases in Canada due to declining vaccination rates
⚠️

Current Outbreak Alert: Measles in Canada

Measles cases have been rising in Canada in recent years, fuelled by gaps in vaccination coverage. Measles spreads through the air and is one of the most contagious diseases known — a single unvaccinated person in a room can infect nearly everyone else who is susceptible. Stay informed and ensure your family is fully vaccinated.

Preventable Diseases

Diseases Vaccines Protect Against

These are some of the diseases that routine immunization programs in Canada actively prevent. Each one can cause serious illness, long-term disability, or death.

🦠

Measles

Highly contagious viral disease that can cause pneumonia, brain damage, and death. Eliminated in Canada through vaccination — but outbreaks still occur when coverage drops.

High RiskMMR Vaccine
💉

Polio

A viral disease that can cause irreversible paralysis. Once widespread, polio is now rare globally due to vaccination — but remains a threat without continued immunization.

Can Cause ParalysisIPV Vaccine
😮‍💨

Pertussis (Whooping Cough)

A severe respiratory infection especially dangerous for infants under 1 year. Can cause prolonged violent coughing fits and is a leading cause of vaccine-preventable infant death.

Infant RiskDTaP Vaccine
🧠

Hib Meningitis

Haemophilus influenzae type b can cause bacterial meningitis and epiglottitis in young children — with risk of brain damage, deafness, or death if untreated.

Brain RiskHib Vaccine
🤧

Rubella (German Measles)

Mild in most people, but devastating if contracted during pregnancy. Congenital rubella syndrome causes deafness, heart defects, and intellectual disability in newborns.

Pregnancy RiskMMR Vaccine
🔴

Hepatitis B

A liver infection that can become chronic and lead to cirrhosis or liver cancer. Spread through blood and body fluids — vaccine provides lifelong protection.

Hep B VaccineLiver Protection
🌡️

Chickenpox (Varicella)

Though often seen as mild, chickenpox can cause serious bacterial skin infections, pneumonia, and encephalitis — particularly in newborns, adults, and immunocompromised individuals.

Varicella Vaccine
💊

Pneumococcal Disease

Streptococcus pneumoniae causes pneumonia, meningitis, and bloodstream infections — especially serious in children under 2 and the elderly.

Pneumo VaccineUnder 2 Risk
Current Health Data

Measles & Rubella Surveillance in Canada

Real-time data on measles and rubella cases across Canada highlights the importance of maintaining high vaccination coverage in every community.

📊

Measles Case Surveillance

Canada tracks reported measles cases through the national notifiable disease reporting system. After near-elimination, measles cases have climbed in recent years due to declining immunization rates and imported cases from international travel.

Cases Rising Since 2019 Nationally Notifiable
View Surveillance Data →
🔬

Rubella Monitoring

Rubella has been eliminated in Canada, but surveillance remains active to detect any returning cases — particularly important for protecting pregnant women from congenital rubella syndrome (CRS).

Elimination Maintained CRS Prevention
View Surveillance Data →
📍

Who Is Most Affected

Recent measles outbreaks in Canada have primarily affected unvaccinated children and young adults in communities with lower vaccination rates — showing that the disease targets the unprotected.

Unvaccinated Highest Risk Community Spread
Learn About Measles →
Take Action

Is Your Family Protected?

Check the Canadian Immunization Schedule and find a clinic near you.