Mosquito plague spreads to 4 more states
1st horse infections discovered in California
Posted: June 30, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern
2004 WorldNetDaily.com
West Nile virus spread yesterday to Tennessee, Connecticut, Kansas and
Nebraska, with positive signs of infection in birds or humans in nearly every
state in the continental U.S. reported this year, a survey by WorldNetDaily
shows.
In addition, California's first cases of horse infections were reported in both
Riverside and San Bernardino counties as officials prepared for a second round
of pesticide spraying in Fontana, where six humans contracted the
mosquito-borne virus.
Four horses – three in Riverside and one in San Bernardino counties – were
infected with West Nile and three were euthanized. A Riverside County horse
that received the two-shot vaccination series survived, said Steve Lyle of the
Department of Food and Agriculture.
In Fontana, three trucks sprayed a 3-square-mile area with the pesticide
resmethrin during a 90-minute operation at dawn Friday. Last week's application
cut the number of mosquitoes roughly in half, said San Bernardino County vector
ecologist Wakoli Wekesa. Officials planned another dawn spraying of the area
today.
Ten human cases of West Nile have been confirmed in San Bernardino, Riverside,
and Los Angeles counties so far this year. All the victims recovered.
The State of Connecticut's Mosquito Management Program officials said yesterday
an infected crow was found earlier this month, the first such positive test
this year in the state.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment also confirmed he presence of
West Nile virus in a bird in Sedgwick County, the first confirmed report in the
state 2004.
WNV is carried by birds and transmitted by mosquitoes that bite the infected
birds, which then transmit it to horses and people.
Meanwhile, in New Mexico, two more people have become affected by mild cases of
West Nile virus.
The New Mexico Department of Health reported a woman from Bernalillo County
contracted an infection in Arizona, while a Santa Fe County woman was most
likely infected near her home.
They join a San Juan County man who was infected with a mild case earlier this
year.
So far, Arizona leads the Southwest and the country with 20 human cases.
Colorado has four cases, and Texas has none.
In Nebraska, test results on a blue jay collected in Kearney County indicate
the first bird in Nebraska to test positive for West Nile Virus this year.
In Tennessee, an unvaccinated horse in Fayette County was the state's first
reported casualty of West Nile virus in 2004.
The mosquito-borne virus is having the biggest impact now in Arizona, with 20
cases including one fatality.
West Nile started infecting people in early May and had reached seven states as
of Tuesday, according to the CDC's June 25 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report. But virus-carrying mosquitoes or infected animals have now been found
in nearly every state.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 32 West Nile virus
infections of humans so far this year, compared with none until July last year,
health officials said.
A report released yesterday by wildlife health experts at the University of
California, Davis, warns that West Nile could pose a serious threat to some
species, especially rare and endangered birds, and encourages officials to
broaden existing monitoring efforts to track the virus's movement in the state.
Prepared by a team led by Walter Boyce, director of the UC Davis Wildlife
Health Center, at the request of the California Department of Fish and Game,
the report predicts where West Nile virus poses the greatest risk to wildlife
by examining mosquito abundance in relation to bird species that "amplify" the
virus and the location of rare amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.
As WND and Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin first reported some U.S. health officials
are beginning to question why the U.S. strain of West Nile virus is deadlier to
humans and birds than anywhere else on the planet – with the exception of
Israel.
West Nile virus, which is transmitted to people by mosquitoes who fed on
infected birds, killed 246 Americans and infected 9,862 last year. This is by
far the worst human toll anywhere in the world at any time since the virus'
discovery in Uganda in 1937.
A 74-year-old Phoenix women died last week of encephalitis, or swelling of the
brain. The virus was transmitted through a mosquito bite.
About 20 percent of West Nile victims report flulike symptoms. About 1 percent
of the time, they develop encephalitis, meningitis or permanent paralysis. The
elderly and those with weakened immune systems are most susceptible.
U.S. health officials believe the West Nile virus has mutated into an illness
far deadlier to human beings in the United States – but they don't know why.
Interestingly, the U.S. strain appears almost identical to only one other
strain in the world – the one found in Israel.
Fewer than 1 percent of the people bitten by an infected mosquito get severely
ill, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In most
cases, those infected never get sick or suffer mild symptoms like fever,
headache, nausea, body aches and a light skin rash.
The disease first appeared in the United States in 1999 in New York state and
has since expanded westward. It has killed more than 560 people in the last
five years.
The highest risk of infection for people and horses is from mid-July to
mid-September.
.
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| User: "dreamwalker" |
|
| Title: Re: WNV Continues unprecedented spread in USA |
30 Jun 2004 06:05:33 PM |
|
|
"TonyZ2001" <tonyz2001@aol.com> wrote in message
news:20040630093237.04588.00000774@mb-m10.aol.com...
Mosquito plague spreads to 4 more states
1st horse infections discovered in California
Posted: June 30, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern
2004 WorldNetDaily.com
West Nile virus spread yesterday to Tennessee, Connecticut, Kansas and
Nebraska, with positive signs of infection in birds or humans in nearly every
state in the continental U.S. reported this year, a survey by WorldNetDaily
shows.
In addition, California's first cases of horse infections were reported in both
Riverside and San Bernardino counties as officials prepared for a second round
of pesticide spraying in Fontana, where six humans contracted the
mosquito-borne virus.
Four horses - three in Riverside and one in San Bernardino counties - were
infected with West Nile and three were euthanized. A Riverside County horse
that received the two-shot vaccination series survived, said Steve Lyle of the
Department of Food and Agriculture.
In Fontana, three trucks sprayed a 3-square-mile area with the pesticide
resmethrin during a 90-minute operation at dawn Friday. Last week's application
cut the number of mosquitoes roughly in half, said San Bernardino County vector
ecologist Wakoli Wekesa. Officials planned another dawn spraying of the area
today.
Ten human cases of West Nile have been confirmed in San Bernardino, Riverside,
and Los Angeles counties so far this year. All the victims recovered.
The State of Connecticut's Mosquito Management Program officials said yesterday
an infected crow was found earlier this month, the first such positive test
this year in the state.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment also confirmed he presence of
West Nile virus in a bird in Sedgwick County, the first confirmed report in the
state 2004.
WNV is carried by birds and transmitted by mosquitoes that bite the infected
birds, which then transmit it to horses and people.
Meanwhile, in New Mexico, two more people have become affected by mild cases of
West Nile virus.
The New Mexico Department of Health reported a woman from Bernalillo County
contracted an infection in Arizona, while a Santa Fe County woman was most
likely infected near her home.
They join a San Juan County man who was infected with a mild case earlier this
year.
So far, Arizona leads the Southwest and the country with 20 human cases.
Colorado has four cases, and Texas has none.
In Nebraska, test results on a blue jay collected in Kearney County indicate
the first bird in Nebraska to test positive for West Nile Virus this year.
In Tennessee, an unvaccinated horse in Fayette County was the state's first
reported casualty of West Nile virus in 2004.
The mosquito-borne virus is having the biggest impact now in Arizona, with 20
cases including one fatality.
West Nile started infecting people in early May and had reached seven states as
of Tuesday, according to the CDC's June 25 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report. But virus-carrying mosquitoes or infected animals have now been found
in nearly every state.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 32 West Nile virus
infections of humans so far this year, compared with none until July last year,
health officials said.
A report released yesterday by wildlife health experts at the University of
California, Davis, warns that West Nile could pose a serious threat to some
species, especially rare and endangered birds, and encourages officials to
broaden existing monitoring efforts to track the virus's movement in the state.
Prepared by a team led by Walter Boyce, director of the UC Davis Wildlife
Health Center, at the request of the California Department of Fish and Game,
the report predicts where West Nile virus poses the greatest risk to wildlife
by examining mosquito abundance in relation to bird species that "amplify" the
virus and the location of rare amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.
As WND and Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin first reported some U.S. health officials
are beginning to question why the U.S. strain of West Nile virus is deadlier to
humans and birds than anywhere else on the planet - with the exception of
Israel.
West Nile virus, which is transmitted to people by mosquitoes who fed on
infected birds, killed 246 Americans and infected 9,862 last year. This is by
far the worst human toll anywhere in the world at any time since the virus'
discovery in Uganda in 1937.
A 74-year-old Phoenix women died last week of encephalitis, or swelling of the
brain. The virus was transmitted through a mosquito bite.
About 20 percent of West Nile victims report flulike symptoms. About 1 percent
of the time, they develop encephalitis, meningitis or permanent paralysis. The
elderly and those with weakened immune systems are most susceptible.
U.S. health officials believe the West Nile virus has mutated into an illness
far deadlier to human beings in the United States - but they don't know why.
Interestingly, the U.S. strain appears almost identical to only one other
strain in the world - the one found in Israel.
Fewer than 1 percent of the people bitten by an infected mosquito get severely
ill, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In most
cases, those infected never get sick or suffer mild symptoms like fever,
headache, nausea, body aches and a light skin rash.
The disease first appeared in the United States in 1999 in New York state and
has since expanded westward. It has killed more than 560 people in the last
five years.
The highest risk of infection for people and horses is from mid-July to
mid-September.
That's odd. Here in Wisconsin we've had a bumper crop of the blood sucking bastards. Only 4 infected
crows have showed across the state. Here in Wisconsin WNV cases are almost non-existant. I live is a
secluded wooded area. The little fuckers almost carry me away. My female dobe came in the house the
other night covered in the blood suckers. Bad year. Too much rain.
.
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| User: "Werewolfy" |
|
| Title: Re: WNV Continues unprecedented spread in USA |
01 Jul 2004 06:32:58 AM |
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"dreamwalker" <backfromthe@dead.net> wrote in message news:<916b0$40e34742$4076282d$27982@powerweb.allthenewsgroups.com>...
That's odd. Here in Wisconsin we've had a bumper crop of the blood sucking bastards. Only 4 infected
crows have showed across the state. Here in Wisconsin WNV cases are almost non-existant. I live is a
secluded wooded area. The little fuckers almost carry me away. My female dobe came in the house the
other night covered in the blood suckers. Bad year. Too much rain.
================================================================================
Better have a word with your 'witch doctor' then. You know, the one
waearing a bulls head and horns.
A few chants around a fire and all will be well.
Werewolfy
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