Gardening can be deadly for seniors

Published: March. 3, 2008 at 4:31 PM

VICTORIA, British Columbia, March 3 (UPI) -- Health officials in Canada's retirement haven of Victoria, British Columbia, are warning senior gardeners dirt can be deadly, as three deaths last year show.

Chief Medical Health Officer Richard Stanwick said three people over the age of 50 died of tetanus on Vancouver Island last year, and it's likely they acquired it from soil in their gardens, the Victoria Times Colonist reported.

"They were all people who haven't had a (tetanus) immunization in at least 10 years or longer," he said. "There's a lot of risk in the garden."

Tetanus, also known as lockjaw, is an infection found in manure and soil that thrives on damaged tissue, and makes its way into the body through even the tiniest of cuts, he said.

It can cause contraction of muscles, stiffness, spasms and death, but can easily be prevented with vaccinations at least every 10 years among adults, he said.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
New Orleans Hornets fire Coach Byron Scott (25 min)
Chicago students arrested after food fight (39 min)
Intel to pay AMD $1.25B settlement
UPI NewsTrack Business
Crude oil prices slide hard Thursday
Unemployed grandmother hits street for job
One Canadian cow sells for $1.2 million
fark
Photoshop this barrier balancer
You can make your very own Tamiflu at home. I'm sure this will end well
Ohio couple married 61 years and died one day apart. There is no escape. Did you hear me? NO ESCAPE...
Elmo vs Spiderman vs Chewbacca: LA's superhero turf wars heat up again
John King to replace Lou Dobbs, says CNN. Dobbs' wife reportedly pleased
Guy's cell phone minutes run out, so he calls 911 five times to see if anyone will have sex with...