NEW YORK, (UPI) -- Almost 2,000 people may been infected with the West Nile virus in the New York City hotspot where it struck the hardest last year.
According to a survey released by the New York City Health
Department, from 533 to 1,903
residents, almost 3 percent of the population, in a three-square-mile
area of northern Queens were
infected with the mosquito-borne virus that killed seven people and made
62 other sill last fall.
However, only a fraction of the people infected with the West Nile virus
became ill with the virus,
which produces flu-like symptoms but can lead to inflammation of the brain.
"None of the 19 people who tested positive for the virus
became seriously ill," said New York
Health Department spokesman John Gadd. "Some reported no symptoms or mild
illness, like a
low-grade fever." The survey tested about 700 people who gave blood voluntarily
last fall at
mobile health vans in the Queens' neighborhoods of Whitestone, Auburndale,
Linden Hill and
Murray Hill.
Those who tested positive for the West Nile virus developed
immunity to the virus but Health
Department officials can't predict how long that immunity will last.
The West Nile virus was first detected in the western
hemisphere last September. The virus is
spread to birds and mammals by mosquitoes. Despite daily spraying of the
pesticide malathion
throughout New York City last fall, the Centers for Disease Control said
this month that the virus
may have hibernated in some mosquitoes and may reappear this summer.
There is no vaccine to protect against the West Nile
encephalitis virus. New York City is planning
an extensive campaign to kill mosquito larva and reduce mosquito breeding
sites. Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani said the city will "kill as many of those critters as possible."
Next month the city will use larvicide in its storm and
sewer lines. The city is also urging residents
to eliminate any standing pool of water that can serve as a breeding ground
for mosquitoes. The
city wants residents and landlords to unclog roof gutters, drain standing
water and rain barrels,
chlorinate pools, dispose of tires and change bird bath water every week.
Meanwhile, the New
York state Department of Health has developed a draft West Nile Virus
Response Plan.
It calls for an extensive education campaign, if needed,
that includes: a professional education kit
containing a letter from the state health commissioner; fact sheets, treatment
information,
reporting instructions, samples of the public education materials and
an order form; information on
the DOH website; and news releases for professional journals and newsletters.
The plan also calls for developing a public education
component, in English, Spanish and other
appropriate languages, that will include, but not be limited to TV and
radio spots; transit
advertising; posters, flyers and paycheck stuffers; news and feature releases,
fact sheets;
information on the DOH website; an informational hotline; print advertising
for ethnic and
community weeklies and Pennysavers; and CDC's "Neato Mosquito" elementary
school
curriculum.
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Mitch Battros
Producer - Earth Changes TV
http://www.earthchangesTV.com