Expert: Canada should be vigilant about Ebola with World Cup coming in two weeks
TORONTO — An expert on public health and communicable diseases says Canada should remain vigilant about an Ebola outbreak in Africa with the FIFA men’s World Cup coming to Toronto and Vancouver in two weeks.
Tim Sly, a professor emeritus at Toronto Metropolitan University’s school of occupational and public health, said there’s currently no need for Canada to limit travel from the Democratic Republic of Congo, even as that country grapples with an epidemic of the deadly disease. The illness, which spreads through direct contact with an infected person’s bodily fluids, is spreading faster than in previous outbreaks but it’s still confined to the DRC with no confirmed cases in Canada.
“Never underestimate Mother Nature, that’s the bottom line,” said Sly. “Mother Nature can come up with all kinds of nasty surprises, and you least expect them to rise up and bite you in the rear end, so we’ve got to keep a finger on the pulse at all times.”
Congo will be competing in the World Cup for only second time this summer, ending a 52-year absence from the international soccer tournament.


