Les médecins souhaitent «rééliminer» la rougeole en luttant contre la désinformation

Dr. Barry Goldlist is photographed at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto on Monday, March 11, 2024. A troubling rise in measles cases has a Toronto doctor remembering a little girl who'd become blind, uncommunicative and incontinent after contracting the virus. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

A troubling rise in measles cases has a Toronto doctor remembering a little girl who became blind, noncommunicative and incontinent after contracting the virus.

Dr. Barry Goldlist was a medical student in 1973 when he saw the child, who was about 10, at the Hospital for Sick Children. She had developed subacute sclerosing panencephalitis, or SSPE, a rare and fatal nervous system disease that typically strikes those who were infected with measles before their second birthday.

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