The Lyme Report was a bi-monthly subscription email newsletter that was published from June 2019 to October 2020 and focussed on tick and tick-borne illness research in Canada. Twice each month, on the 1st and the 15th, the newsletter was delivered directly to subscribers' email inboxes, bringing them up-to-date information on the latest research being conducted in Canada on Lyme disease, other tick-borne illnesses and, of course, the many intriguing species of ticks that make their home in this country.
Issue Index
- Issue 1: eTick.ca
- Issue 2: The Tick Microbiome Initiative
- Issue 3: Making waves in tick research
- Issue 4: Mapping Lyme disease risk in Manitoba
- Issue 5: Lyme disease in the Maritimes
- Issue 6: The unexpected role of earthworms in the spread of ticks
- Issue 7: The Canadian Lyme Disease Research Network
- Issue 8: The psychological impact of Lyme disease on parents
- Issue 9: The Mount Allison Lyme Research Network
- Issue 10: Another day, another tick species hits our radar
- Issue 11: The sweet smell of success
- Issue 12: Anaplasma makes itself at home
- Issue 13: Under surveillance
- Issue 14: Ticks every Canadian should know
- Issue 15: A Powassan's virus primer
- Issue 16: Tick-borne illnesses in Canadian horses
- Issue 17: Lyme disease vaccines
- Issue 18: Spotlight on Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- Issue 19: Lyme disease in Canadian children
- Issue 20: The Infectious Disease and Climate Change Fund
- Issue 21: Indigenous research in La Belle Province
- Issue 22: A multi-provincial approach to Lyme
- Issue 23: Citizen science project expands
- Issue 24: Taking a bite out of Lyme misdiagnosis
- Issue 25: Putting strain variation under the microscope
- Issue 26: The G. Magnotta Lyme Research Lab charts a course for success
- Issue 27: Predicting the future spread of Lyme disease in Canada
- Issue 28: The other borreliosis
- Issue 29: A scientist with a taste for the bizarre
- Issue 30: The Lyme disease-CFS connection
- Issue 31: Best practices in Lyme disease treatment
- Issue 32: Putting Lyme disease in context
- Issue 33: Leading us into the future