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VIDA AENELVALLE
ORIGINAL
ARTICLE
(Published Wednesday, August, 10, 2005 11:55AM)
MODESTO -- In an effort to control West Nile virus in Modesto, officials
sprayed for mosquitoes last Thursday in the city's northeast section and
around two parks in the city's northwest.
The announcement came as Stanislaus County health officials confirmed
the county's twelve human case of West Nile infection this year.
Due for the early morning spraying last week were Village I subdivisions
along Merle, Floyd and Sylvan avenues, west of Claus Road; plus Muncy
Park off Prescott Road south of West Rumble Road, and Davis Community
Park at College Avenue and West Rumble Road.
Lloyd Douglass, general manager of East Side Mosquito Abatement District,
said he believes those areas are hot spots for the virus because of growing
mosquito populations and dead birds that tested positive. The Village
I neighborhoods are close to farmland where mosquitoes can breed.
West Nile virus is transmitted to people and animals through mosquito
bites. Mosquitoes become infected when they feed on infected birds.
"The (mosquito) numbers started picking up in the last week,"
Douglass said. "It is so hot, they are hatching out faster."
Officials said a truck drove through the neighborhoods and around the
parks, releasing the chemical pyrethrin.
The state Department of Health Services says pyrethrin is not harmful
to people or animals. Douglass said pyrethrin kills mosquitoes on contact
and has no residual effects.
Residents in the neighborhoods that were sprayed were advised to close
their windows before going to bed the night before to keep the spray from
drifting into their homes.
Several Village I residents said they had not seen many mosquitoes or
dead birds, but were comfortable with the decision to spray.
Roger Williams, a resident of the Millbrook subdivision, said: "You
have all those fields over there, and there is standing water with mosquitoes."
The last three individuals to have tested positive with the West Nile
virus were women ages 26, 28 and 53 bringing the total to twelve confirmed
cases in the county, according to Dr. John Walker, Stanislaus County's
public health officer.
"The virus is in Stanislaus County," Jones said. "Everyone
needs to take precautions."
In San Joaquín County, Public Health Services announced last Monday
that a 55-year-old woman living in the southern part of the county has
tested positive for West Nile virus. The woman had no symptoms and discovered
she has the virus after requesting a blood test from her doctor, said
Connie Cassinetto, a county spokeswoman. This marks the county's first
reported human case of the virus in 2005; Merced County has had one.
The woman recently traveled outside the county; officials did not know
where she got infected. About 80 percent of people who are infected will
not have symptoms. About 80 percent of people who are infected will have
no symptoms. Others will experience flu like effects in two to 15 days,
and less than 1 percent will become seriously ill. Mosquitoes become infected
when they feed on infected birds or other animals.
Douglass said people living near the hot spots can take precautions such
as eliminating sources of standing water, changing the water in pet dishes
and regularly replacing water in birdbaths.
Also, avoid spending time outside at dawn and dusk, when mosquitoes are
most active. And use insect repellent containing DEET.
For more West Nile information, the county offers recorded information
in English and Spanish at this hot line: 558-8425. Additional information
is available online from the Health Services Agency, www.hsahealth.org.
Ken Carlson is a Modesto Bee reporter
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