West Nile Virus Detected In Hillsborough County; Advisory Issued | Tampa, FL Patch

2022-08-20 02:56:14 By : Mr. Joe Liu

TAMPA, FL — The Florida Department of Health in Hillsborough County has issued a countywide advisory after two sentinel chickens tested positive for West Nile virus.

The DOH is warning residents and visitor to protect themselves against the mosquito-borne disease. The detection of the virus in the sentinel chickens signals a heightened risk of transmission to humans.

The Mosquito Control Department maintains sentinel chicken coops throughout the county and draws blood from the chickens once a week. The FDOH tests the blood for antibodies to viruses that are easily passed from mosquitoes to birds and vice versa, such as eastern equine encephalitis, St. Louis encephalitis and West Nile viruses.

The mosquitoes that transmit these viruses are partial to blood from birds so Hillsborough County's sentinel chickens serve as an early warning of the presence of these potentially serious viruses that can be passed on to humans, horses, dogs and other animals.

Chickens serve as ideal sentinels to alert health officials of the presence of these viruses because, while they can be infected with these viruses and produce the antibodies, they don't experience the illness and are unable to transmit the viruses to uninfected mosquitoes.

West Nile virus can cause mild to severe illness, according to the FDOH.

It was first identified in Uganda in 1937 and showed up in the United States in 1999 in New York, reaching Florida in 2001.

Since its initial detection, human cases of West Nile virus have been reported in all U.S. states except Alaska and Hawaii. The virus is now considered endemic in the U.S., with annual epidemics occurring in some parts of the country, peaking in the late summer months.

To date, the virus was detected in Miami-Dade County June 7, July 18 and July 29; in Osceola County June 7; in Sarasota County on Aug. 5; and in Pinellas County Aug. 11.

Most West Nile virus infections (approximately 80 percent) are asymptomatic. People who do develop symptoms usually experience a mild illness called West Nile fever that includes headaches, fevers, pain and fatigue.

Less than 1 percent of infected people develop the most severe form of disease, neuroinvasive WNV, which may cause meningitis and encephalitis and can result in irreversible neurological damage, paralysis, coma or death.

People over the age of 60 and those with weakened immune systems (especially transplant recipients and HIV-infected people) are at an increased risk.

There is no specific treatment for West Nile virus, and most mild infections typically dissipate with little or no medical intervention within a few weeks.

Residents are reminded to take precautions to protect themselves from mosquito-borne diseases by taking the following actions:

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