CBCnews

Moncton Wildcats GM defends immunizing players

Last Updated: Monday, November 2, 2009 | 6:02 PM AT

Bill Schurman, the general manager of the Moncton Wildcats, said his team has been vaccinated against the swine flu.Bill Schurman, the general manager of the Moncton Wildcats, said his team has been vaccinated against the swine flu. (CBC)

The general manager of the Moncton Wildcats hockey team is defending the decision to vaccinate its players against swine flu as hundreds of others across the region wait in long lines to get their shots.

Bill Schurman said the organization started planning for the H1N1 influenza pandemic in late summer and was able to get enough seasonal and swine flu shots for all 25 players on the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League team.

"We ordered it," he told CBC News on Monday. "I mean, there's nothing else that I can say other than we as an organization, we're responsible for these players and they're very active and high-profile and we have our own medical staff.

"We're not apologizing for that. Actually, it's something that the organization is very proud of."

A spokesperson with the QMJHL said it did not purchase the vaccine and that its only role was sending H1N1 protocol guidelines to its teams.

Schurman said his team members make public appearances at hospitals, seniors homes and schools, and the organization wanted to ensure the players were vaccinated before they were sent out in public.

"When this first started, we took the pro-active approach to order the product," he said.

Game cancelled

Meanwhile, Sunday's scheduled game between the Wildcats and the Montreal Juniors was cancelled because too many players on the Wildcats were ill or injured.

Schurman said about eight were sick with flu-like symptoms. He said the team's medical staff has done some preliminary testing and so far, no players have tested positive for H1N1.

"Some of what is happening is a result of getting the injection. There are some people who react to that," he said. "We just did not have enough players to keep the game going."

QMJHL rules state that a team must have at least 16 members to play; the Wildcats had 11.

  •  
 

Related

New Brunswick Headlines

N.B. to spend $1B on infrastructure
The New Brunswick government is poised to spend more than $1 billion on infrastructure next year, the premier says.
New orthopedic surgery table for Fredericton hospital
The New Brunswick government has spent more than $200,000 on a new operating table to bring relief to patients needing orthopedic surgery.
Irvings contribute $500K to Imperial Theatre
The Imperial Theatre in Saint John has received a huge gift from Arthur and Jack Irving and will rename its auditorium in appreciation.
Russell terrier hunts bedbugs
A little dog in Moncton is helping people sleep tight by sniffing out biting bedbugs.
N.B. urged to improve social assistance
A New Brunswick advocacy group is asking the province to show more compassion for people living on low incomes.

Canada Headlines

Child who died at airport was 'always smiling': father Video
The father of the toddler who died Sunday after a fall at Toronto's Pearson International Airport says his family is still trying to cope with an event that "was not supposed to happen."
RCMP watchdog won't be reappointed
The federal government will not be reappointing Paul Kennedy as the chair of the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP, CBC News has learned.
4 Toronto Humane Society animals euthanized Video
Four animals inside the Toronto Humane Society's shelter in the east end of the city had to be euthanized after animal cruelty charges were laid against the president and the board of directors at the facility.
Tories set to introduce HST bill
The federal Conservatives are set to introduce legislation next week that would allow provinces to harmonize the provincial sales tax and federal GST on products and services.
Arrest made in Hamilton prisoner escape case Video
Police have arrested a 19-year-old man suspected of aiding the escape of Hamilton prisoner Fawad Nouri earlier this week.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines