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https://edition.cnn.com/2018/04/17/health/nyc-house-mice-study/index.html

New viruses, superbugs found in study of New York house mice
By Susan Scutti, CNN

Updated 1750 GMT (0150 HKT) April 17, 2018




180416135012-002-house-mouse-restricted-exlarge-169.jpg

House mouse (Mus domesticus / Mus musculus) foraging inside building. (Photo by: Arterra/UIG via Getty Images)
Story highlights
  • Mice captured across NYC carried 36 separate viruses, including six new ones
  • They also carried bacteria including E. coli, Shigella and Salmonella
(CNN)House mice don't carry door keys, but they can freely enter any residence in New York City, from low-rent studios to penthouse suites.

A yearlong assessment of the city's residential mouse population found that what many of these rodents do carry are previously unseen viruses as well as bacteria capable of causing life-threatening human illness. Some of the bacteria were even antibiotic-resistant.
"Mouse droppings may contain harmful bacteria that are difficult to treat with common antibiotics," said Dr. W. Ian Lipkin, senior author of the two papers resulting from the study and a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health. "Contaminated areas should be thoroughly cleaned, and contaminated food should be discarded."
Lipkin's research was published Tuesday in mBio, the journal of the American Society for Microbiology.
'More worrisome' than rats
Over a period of about a year, Lipkin and his colleagues collected 416 mice from residential buildings at seven sites in four of New York City's five boroughs (Staten Island was excluded). Primarily, the scientists caught the mice in or around garbage disposal areas in sub-basements, though five mice were trapped in food preparation/storage areas of a commercial building, and a single mouse was imprisoned in a private apartment.
For one of the two papers, Lipkin and his team searched for and analyzed bacteria in the droppings of the captured mice. Running genetic tests, the researchers defined 235 separate genera and 149 distinct species of bacteria, including the most common causes of gastrointestinal upset: C. difficile, E. coli, Shigella and Salmonella.
A leading cause of bacterial food poisoning, Salmonella alone causes 1.2 million reported cases, including 450 deaths, in the US each year.

Forget 'Pizza Rat'; meet 'Pita Rat'

Further analysis of the identified bacteria showed evidence of genes indicative of antimicrobial resistance to several common antibiotics.
A second paper concerned the viral load of the mouse droppings.
Here, the researchers discovered 36 separate viruses, including six new ones. None of the viruses identified by the researchers is known to infect humans, however, the genetic sequences matched those known to infect dogs, chickens and pigs. This suggests that some of the viruses might have crossed over from other species.
Though New Yorkers tend to be most squeamish about rats, "mice are more worrisome because they live indoors and are more likely to contaminate our environment," said Lipkin, who is director of the Center for Infection and Immunity at Mailman. "To our knowledge, this is the first such survey in NYC," he said, adding that the laboratory work was "substantial."
Country mice and city mice
Professor John Baines, an evolutionary biologist working at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Germany and Kiel University in Germany, appreciates the "multitiered approach" used by Lipkin and his colleagues to look for pathogens within the droppings.
Baines, who was not involved in the research, explained that within some groups of bacteria, there are many different members, some pathogenic (or disease-causing), others harmless. By using different methods of analysis, the researchers were able to learn more about the microbes.
"The more you look, the more you may potentially find," Baines said. "It's a nice combined approach."

Pizza Rat: Our newest obsession

The samples studied, gathered only in New York City, are "relatively limited in a geographic context," he said.
Do country mice carry the same bacteria and viruses as city mice? "One would really have to do the same experiments in the city and in the countryside to have a direct comparison," said Baines, who, for his own most recent research, "laid traps in and around farms" to find sick mice in the wild.
"We were essentially looking for pathology in the mice and then trying to trace back what was causing the pathology," he said. The pathogens "making mice sick in more rural environments are also known to make humans sick. So there is some overlap there."
Professor Mark Viney, a biologist at the University of Bristol, said the findings "would probably be pretty similar across any city in the world, because what you've got in cities is lots of people and rats and mice and so on living closely together." Viney conducts related research but was not involved in the current study.
In the countryside, it might be different, Viney said, "because then the density of people is less, so mice would be in closer contact with wild animals, perhaps livestock, cows and sheep and pigs."

These cities have the worst roach and rodent infestations

"Of course, we don't know that, so we need to do future studies to understand that," he added.
"Over the last few years, it's become abundantly clear that all living animals are full of bacteria and viruses," Viney said. "That's the normal state of animals, and it's true of humans as well, and the vast majority of these bacteria and viruses are harmless."
The antibiotic resistance found by the researchers is, "again, absolutely as one would expect," he said.
"And that's because there's a lot of antibacterial resistance in the bacteria that people and many animals have, and of course those genes therefore are spread into the wider bacterial environment," he said.
Viney, who studies the immune responses of wild mice, noted that "an enormous amount is known about the immune responses of lab mice." However, they live "very different lives" than wild mice, which are not so well-fed or making a home in nearly "sterile conditions."
Wild mice have very elevated immune responses compared with lab mice, Viney said. "That's because the wild mice are being exposed to infections all the time, bacteria and viruses and occasionally worms and some fleas and ticks."
As for the city mice, the question is: Where did these bugs come from, and what are the consequences?
"We have no idea," Viney said. One possibility is that house mice are picking up the bacteria and viruses that are passed through human waste and feces into the sewer systems.
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"Whether these are a source of infection for humans: Who knows?" he said. "My guess is, other people are the biggest source of infection for people as well." He said more study is needed.
Both Baines and Lipkin agree.
"The next step is to determine whether [human] outbreaks of infection with bacteria can be traced back to exposure to mice," Lipkin said.
 

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http://www.11alive.com/article/news...recall-affecting-central-georgia/93-540653227


Chopped romaine lettuce recall affecting Central Georgia
Bibb County Schools has thrown away all chopped romaine lettuce.

Author: Wanya Reese
Published: 5:31 PM EDT April 17, 2018
Updated: 6:57 PM EDT April 17, 2018
More than 30 cases of people getting sick from chopped romaine lettuce have been reported to the CDC. Tuesday, Bibb County schools are reacting, and some stores have taken it off the shelves.

Chopped romaine lettuce, the type often used in salads or sandwiches, has hospitalized 22 people across the United States, according to the CDC. Brenda Smelter spent part of the day grocery shopping and said she was not aware of the recall.

"Normally when I go in, I don't buy lettuce, but today, I wanted to try the romaine lettuce. But normally, I always get the spinach leaves to make sandwiches with, but I wanted to try this today," Smelter said.

Luckily, the lettuce Smelter purchased was not affected, but according to the CDC, chopped bagged romaine lettuce from Yuma, Arizona could be contaminated with E. coli. The CDC warning prompted Bibb County schools to throw away all their lettuce.

"We pulled all the products off the shelf, off the line, we made sure none of the items actually were actually romaine lettuce. We made sure none of the romaine lettuce were mixed with other products," said Vequita Gore, the cafeteria manager at Alexander II.

Bibb County Schools sent a phone call to parents Monday night to warn them about the E. coli outbreak, and nutrition director Timikel Sharpe said while this plays out, they will make sure students get other forms of leafy food in their diet.

"We already had a plan that we were going to create the salads using a different lettuce -- that is not a part of the recall. It's not a romaine lettuce, it's what we call an iceberg salad mix," Sharpe said.

The CDC recommends that you throw away any chopped romaine lettuce in your fridge and confirm with restaurants before you order that they are not serving the contaminated mix. Some who have gotten sick developed kidney failure, according to the CDC. Smelter does not want to be one of the people who gets sick and said she is going to let her family know about the recall.

"I'll make sure I let them know, rather it be via text or Facebook, or whatever, to let them to be aware, you know, there is a recall, because sometimes you're rushing and we don't look at the signs, and we just grab something ,"Smelter said.

The CDC says this outbreak is not specific and they have not identified a common source for the romaine lettuce. They say if you have any questions about lettuce you purchased, be smart and just throw it away. The CDC is still investigating this E. coli outbreak and said more cases may be possible.

© 2018 WMAZ

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http://www.nj.com/hunterdon/index.ssf/2018/04/a_swarming_exotic_tick_species_now_dwells_in_nj.html

A swarming, exotic tick species is now living year round in N.J.
Updated Apr 21, 9:17 PM; Posted Apr 21, 7:04 PM
tickinfestjpg-5671c5850a3168c6.jpg

Longhorn ticks found on the ear of a Hunterdon County sheep last year have survived the winter, according to authorities. (Photo courtesy of Tadhgh Rainey)




By Chris Sheldon

NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

An exotic species of tick that mysteriously appeared in New Jersey last year is now here to stay.

The New Jersey Department of Agriculture announced Friday that the East Asian tick, also known as Longhorned tick or the bush tick, which was discovered on a Hunterdon County farm last year, has survived the winter.

"Ongoing surveillance continued during the winter and on April 17, 2018, the National Veterinary Services Laboratory confirmed the Longhorned tick successfully overwintered in New Jersey and has possibly become established in the state," it was stated in a news release.

Last summer, a farmer walked into the Hunterdon County health office covered in thousands of the ticks after she was shearing a 12-year-old Icelandic sheep named Hannah. Experts were called in to identify the tick which was not previously known to exist in the United States. The Department of Agriculture says it still does not know how the tick made its way to New Jersey.

The sheep has never traveled internationally and has rarely left Hunterdon County, according to Andrea Egizi, a tick specialist at the Monmouth County Tick-borne Disease Lab.


The longhorn tick. The larval and nymphal stages are difficult to observe with the naked eye. Larvae can be found from late summer to early winter. (Photo courtesy New Jersey Department of Agriculture)
When the incident was first reported, steps were taken to eradicate the insect from the farm by using a chemical wash on the sheep and removing tall grass where the they are known to dwell. The exact location of the farm and the identity of the sheep farmer is being withheld by the New Jersey Department of Agriculture.

Although the ticks are known to carry diseases, such as spotted fever rickettsioses in other parts of the world, tests performed on the ticks and the farm animals were negative for diseases.

Local, state and federal animal health and wildlife officials, as well as Rutgers University - Center for Vector Biology, are working together to eliminate the ticks and stop them from spreading. Wildlife and livestock in the area will continue to be monitored throughout the year.

The ticks are known to swarm and infest deer and animals other than sheep, so the department is warning that it has the potential to infect other North American wildlife species. The ticks reproduce asexually by cloning themselves and just one of them is capable of laying thousands of eggs.

State and federal Department of Agriculture employees will be working with the public to determine if the tick has spread and to educate the public about protecting their livestock and pets from the pest.

The nymphs of the ticks are very small, resemble small spiders and are easy to miss, according to the Department of Agriculture. They are dark brown, about the size of a pea when full grown and can be found in tall grasses.

Authorities are asking people to contact the state veterinarian at 609-671-6400 if they see any unusual ticks on their livestock.

Unusual ticks detected in wildlife should be reported to the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife, Bureau of Wildlife Management at 609-984-6295 or the Office of Fish and Wildlife Health and Forensics at 908-637-4173, ext. 120.

Any questions about tick-borne illness in humans should be directed to local health departments or the New Jersey Department of Health at 609-826-5964.
 

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nj is a hotbed for ah nehs. there's a direct correlation between surge in h1-b's for ah nehs and the rise of superbugs in america.
 

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https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucel...-species-that-is-new-to-america/#347b222a7bc1

New Jersey Is Dealing With A Tick Species That Is New To America


Bruce Y. Lee
, Contributor Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.

The Haemaphysalis longicornis tick can carry the virus that causes severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS). (Photo: Shutterstock)

Looks like a bunch of New Jersey residents survived the Winter. But that is not really good news.

On Friday, the New Jersey Department of Agriculture announced the latest follow-up to what was described in a February 2018 publication in the Journal of Medical Entomology. The publication detailed an "uptick" in the New Jersey population that occurred last Summer. On August 1 , 2017, after shearing a 12-year-old Icelandic sheep named Hannah, a farmer went to the Hunterdon County Health Office with some new companions. Thousands of them, in fact. No, she didn't form a flash mob. Instead, she had thousands of ticks covering her body. Yes, you can say ewe and ewwwww.

What was particularly disturbing about this situation (besides the fact that she was covered with thousands of ticks) was that this was a tick species not typically found in the United States. And it certainly wasn't one of the 5 tick species that were known to be present in New Jersey, which, of course, you know are Ixodes scapularis, Amblyomma americanum, Dermacentor variabilis, Rhipicephalus sanguineus, and Ixodes cookei.

Instead, it was the Haemaphysalis longicornis species, otherwise known as the East Asian or Longhorned tick. This tick is usually found in East Asia (Russia, Japan, China, and Korea), New Zealand, parts of Australia, and several Pacific islands (New Caledonia, Fiji, Western Samoa, Tonga, Vanuatu). Hannah the sheep had not traveled internationally or even much outside Hunterdon County (presumably officials had checked the sheep's passport, frequent flier miles, and Instagram account). Therefore, officials are still not sure how the tick entered the United States.



Here's the description of what officials found when they investigated the Hunterdon property in early October:

The ticks in the paddock were so numerous that they crawled on investigators’ pants soon after setting foot inside. The sheep was supporting hundreds of ticks, including all three active life stages (larva, nymph, adult). Although ticks were concentrated on the sheep’s ears and face, engorged ticks of all stages were readily found all over its body, including areas beneath the animal’s thick coat. In contrast, questing ticks recovered from the field were almost exclusively larvae.

Again, ewe and ewwwww. By the way, "questing" doesn't mean looking for the Holy Grail or traveling to Mordor to get rings and save the world. "Questing" is a position that ticks assume when they are waiting to climb on a person or animal. This was the first time that this tick was found to be breeding in the U.S. Oh, and by the way, these ticks don't need to have sex to multiply.


Oh sheep. Officials found hundreds of ticks, including all three active life stages (larva, nymph, adult) on sheep in New Jersey. (Photo: Shutterstock)

Having a new tick on the block is concerning. Rarely, do you hear anyone say, "ticks, oh good." That's because ticks suck, literally and figuratively. A tick can attach to your skin, insert its feeding tube into your skin, use its saliva to numb the area so that you can't feel it, and then suck your blood for days. This can occur if you are a human or another mammal, depending on the species of tick. During feeding, a tick can pick up or deposit various microbes. Thus, ticks can serve as an Uber for disease-causing microbes between humans and other mammals.

As described in this publication in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases (note that you usually do not want to catch any disease that's been featured in this journal), the Haemaphysalis longicornis tick has been spreading the virus that causes severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) in parts of China. SFTS is what it sounds like, a disease that results in fever and low platelets, so that you start bleeding. Oh,and you never want to catch a disease with the word "severe" in its name. Almost a third of those infected in China in 2009 with SFTS died. This particular species of tick has also been known to spread Rickettsia japonica, which can cause Oriental spotted fever, and Theileria orientalis, which can cause theileriosis in cattle, and to carry other microbes such as Anaplasma, Ehrlichia, and Borrelia spp. Indeed, all of this should leave you ticked off. So far, health officials have not found the Longhorned ticks in New Jersey to be carrying any disease-causing microbes. But as they say, tick-tock, tick-tock, eventually they could.

As Chris Sheldon wrote for NJ.com, officials have tried to eliminate the ticks by washing the sheep with chemicals, cutting tall grass in the area, and monitoring the spread of the ticks. They were hoping that the ticks may not have survived the Winter. However, the New Jersey Department of Agriculture announced on Friday that despite the cold Winter, this new tick species is still hanging around. Indeed, New Jerseyans can be tough, and unfortunately these new New Jersey residents may be so as well.

Follow me on Twitter @bruce_y_lee and visit our Global Obesity Prevention Center (GOPC) at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Read my other Forbes pieces here.
 

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/01/health/ticks-mosquitoes-diseases.html

Tick and Mosquito Infections Spreading Rapidly, C.D.C. Finds
Global Health

By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr. MAY 1, 2018

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More Americans are living in wooded suburbs near deer, which carry the ticks that spread Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, babesiosis, rabbit fever and Powassan virus. Credit Scott Camazine/Science Source
Farewell, carefree days of summer.

The number of people getting diseases transmitted by mosquito, tick and flea bites has more than tripled in the United States in recent years, federal health officials reported on Tuesday. Since 2004, at least nine such diseases have been discovered or newly introduced here.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention did not suggest that Americans drop plans for softball games or hammock snoozes. But officials emphasized that it’s increasingly important for everyone — especially children — to be protected from outdoor pests with bug repellent.

New tickborne diseases like Heartland virus are showing up in the continental United States, even as cases of Lyme disease and other established infections are growing. On island territories like Puerto Rico, the threat is mosquitoes carrying viruses like dengue and Zika.

Warmer weather is an important cause of the surge, according to the lead author of a study published in the C.D.C.’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

But the author, Dr. Lyle R. Petersen, the agency’s director of vector-borne diseases, declined to link the increase to the politically fraught issue of climate change, and the report does not mention climate change or global warming. Many other factors are at work, he emphasized, including increased jet travel and a lack of vaccines.

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A column by Donald G. McNeil Jr. about global health news.
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“The numbers on some of these diseases have gone to astronomical levels,” Dr. Petersen added.

C.D.C. officials called for more support for state and local health departments. Local agencies “are our first line of defense,” said Dr. Robert Redfield, the new director at the agency, which is facing its own deep budget cuts. “We must enhance our investment in their ability to fight these diseases.”

Although state and local health departments get brief infusions of cash during health scares like the Zika epidemic in 2016, they are chronically underfunded. A recent survey of mosquito control agencies found that 84 percent needed help with such basics as surveillance and testing for resistance to pesticides, Dr. Petersen said.

[READ: Tips for Protecting Yourself Against Mosquitoes and Ticks]

Between 2004 and 2016, about 643,000 cases of 16 insect-borne illnesses were reported to the C.D.C. — 27,000 a year in 2004, rising to 96,000 by 2016. (The year 2004 was chosen as a baseline because the agency began requiring more detailed reporting then.)

The real case numbers were undoubtedly far larger, Dr. Petersen said. For example, the C.D.C. estimates that about 300,000 Americans get Lyme disease each year, but only about 35,000 diagnoses are reported.

The study did not delve into the reasons for the increase, but Dr. Petersen said it was probably caused by many factors, including two related to weather: ticks thriving in regions previously too cold for them, and hot spells triggering outbreaks of mosquito-borne diseases.

Other factors, he said, include expanded human travel, suburban reforestation and a dearth of new vaccines to stop outbreaks.

More jet travel from the tropics means that previously obscure viruses like dengue and Zika are moving long distances rapidly in human blood. (By contrast, malaria and yellow fever are thought to have reached the Americas on slave ships three centuries ago.)

A good example, Dr. Petersen said, was chikungunya, which causes joint pain so severe that it is called “bending-up disease.”

In late 2013, a Southeast Asian strain arrived on the Dutch Caribbean island of St. Maarten, its first appearance in this hemisphere. Within one year, local transmission had occurred everywhere in the Americas except Canada, Chile, Peru and Bolivia.

Tickborne diseases, the report found, are rising steadily in the Northeast, the Upper Midwest and California. Ticks spread Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, babesiosis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, rabbit fever, Powassan virus and other ills, some of them only recently discovered.

Ticks need deer or rodents as their main blood hosts, and those have increased as forests in suburbs have gotten thicker, deer hunting has waned, and rodent predators like foxes have disappeared.

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[READ: Lyme Disease’s Worst Enemy? It Might Be Foxes]

(A century ago, the Northeast had fewer trees than it now does; forests made a comeback as farming shifted west and firewood for heating was replaced by coal, oil and gas.)

Most disease outbreaks related to mosquitoes since 2004 have been in Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and American Samoa. But West Nile virus, which arrived in 1999, now appears unpredictably across the country; Dallas, for example, saw a big outbreak in 2012.

For most of these diseases, there are no vaccines and no treatment, so the only way to fight back is through mosquito control, which is expensive and rarely stops outbreaks. Miami, for instance, was the only city in the Western Hemisphere to halt a Zika outbreak with pesticides.

The only flea-borne disease mentioned in the C.D.C. report is plague, the bacterium responsible for the medieval Black Death. It remains rare but persistent: Between two and 17 cases were reported from 2004 to 2016, mostly in the Southwest. The infection can be cured with antibiotics.

Dr. Nicholas Watts, a global health specialist at University College London and co-author of a major 2017 report on climate change and health, said warmer weather is spreading disease in many wealthy countries, not just the United States.

In Britain, he said, tick diseases are expanding as summers lengthen, and malaria is becoming more common in the northern reaches of Australia.

But Paul Reiter, a medical entomologist at the Pasteur Institute, has argued that some environmentalists exaggerate the disease threats posed by climate change.

The 2003-2014 period fell during what he described as “a pause” in global warming, although the notion is disputed by other experts.

Still, the dynamics of disease transmission are complicated, and driven by more than temperature. For example, transmission of West Nile virus requires that certain birds be present, too.

In the Dust Bowl years of the 1930s, St. Louis encephalitis, a related virus, surged, “and it looked like climate issues were involved,” Dr. Reiter said. But the increase turned out to depend more on varying hot-cold and wet-dry spells and the interplay of two different mosquito species. St. Louis encephalitis virtually disappeared, weather notwithstanding.

“It’s a complicated, multidimensional system,” Dr. Reiter said.

A. Marm Kilpatrick, a disease ecologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said many factors beside hot weather were at work in the United States, including “a hump-shaped relationship between temperature and transmission potential.”

Warm weather helps mosquitoes and ticks breed and transmit disease faster, he explained. But after a certain point, the hotter and drier it gets, the more quickly the pests die. So disease transmission to humans peaks somewhere between mildly warm and hellishly hot weather.

Experts also pointed out that the increase in reports of spreading disease may have resulted partially from more testing.

Lyme disease made family doctors begin to suspect tick bites in patients with fevers. Laboratories began looking for different pathogens in blood samples, especially in patients who did not have Lyme. That led to the discovery of previously unknown diseases.
 

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https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...ng-home/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.2cd887fdbd5e

She modeled in New York and worked for the Navy. At 93, parasites ate her alive at a nursing home.


by Kristine Phillips May 1 at 7:00 AM Email the author
JWYDI3GBIY4S5BTE4H6GOQYYU4.jpg

Rebecca Zeni died at age 93 after she was infected with crusted scabies while living at a Georgia nursing home. (Courtesy of Lance Lourie)

Pictures of Rebecca Zeni during her younger years showed her with flawless skin, well-defined eyebrows and long, thick lashes. Her hair, parted in the middle, was neatly tied with a bow behind her ear.

Her beauty could capture a room, her daughter said, but she was more than just a beautiful face.

She was a modern-day woman of the 1940s and 1950s, headstrong, career-oriented and hard-working, said Mike Prieto, a lawyer representing Zeni’s family. At a time when women were expected to marry young and have children, the small-town girl from North Carolina moved to Norfolk after high school to work at the naval base there, her daughter, Pamela Puryear, said. She later became a model in New York City and worked as an assistant for CBS News’s Mike Wallace before she married and became a stay-at-home mother.

“Her life just became exciting,” Puryear said. “She thought in her mind that everybody’s life is just like this.”

But the once-vibrant woman later found herself living in a nursing home, where she suffered a long, painful death, her family’s attorneys said. Parasitic mites had burrowed under her skin, living and laying eggs all over her body. By the time she died, vesicles and thick crusts had formed on her skin. Her right hand had turned nearly black, and Prieto said her fingers were about to fall off.

SA6RIRCYO47XDAEVEJTG6SC66I.jpg

Rebecca Zeni died at the age of 93 after she was infected with Norwegian crusted scabies while living at a Georgia nursing home. (Courtesy of Lance Lourie)
The scabies that infected Zeni’s body had become so severe that bacteria seeped into her bloodstream. She died in 2015 at age 93.

Zeni’s death is now the subject of a lawsuit filed against PruittHealth, a for-profit company that owns dozens of nursing homes, including Shepherd Hills in LaFayette, Ga., where Zeni lived for five years until she died. Shepherd Hills, a nursing home that had multiple scabies outbreaks in recent years and a history of health violations, failed to follow policies and procedures to prevent the occurrence and spread of the highly contagious disease, documents say. Instead of providing the care that Zeni desperately needed, the lawsuit alleges that the nursing home allowed her to die an agonizing death.

“The last six months of her life, she was in constant pain,” Prieto said. “She was literally being eaten alive from inside out.”

A troubling history
Zeni’s death raises crucial — and familiar — questions about for-profit nursing homes that have long been accused of sacrificing patient care to minimize costs and maximize bottom lines. Nursing homes owned by big corporations and private investment firms consistently performed poorly in terms of quality of care and are more likely than nonprofit and government facilities to be cited for “serious deficiencies” that harm residents, according to 2011 and 2016 reports by the Government Accountability Office. Staffing levels are usually lower, meaning trained nurses spend less time with residents each day.

“You must consider that the reimbursement rate from CMS [Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services] continues to fail to keep up with rising costs that’s associated with care,” said Prieto, who focuses on nursing-home litigation. “The only variable that’s available for these for-profit facilities to ensure they continue to maximize their opportunity for profiting is staffing. Purposefully understaff facilities in an attempt to ensure maximum profit.”

Avi Mukherjee, a professor at Marshall University who focuses on health-care management, said high staff turnovers, diminishing morale, and meager pay and benefits often result in low quality of care.

“The key is to understand that low service quality and negative outcomes for patients and residents is not in the interest of the long-term survival of these companies,” Mukherjee said.

PruittHealth’s spokesman and attorneys did not respond to calls or emails seeking comment.

Federal health inspection records paint a troubling picture of the company, which describes itself as the “regional leader” of providing long-term health care to the elderly in the southeast.

Shepherd Hills was ordered to pay $337,786 in penalties over the past two years and has a one-star rating — the lowest — from Medicare based on health inspection results, staffing and quality of care.

In 2016, for example, the facility was penalized for several staff medication errors, some of which resulted in life-threatening situations. One resident was mistakenly given morphine twice within a half-hour one morning and continued to receive the medication every two hours later that night and the following day, records show. The resident overdosed and was rushed to the intensive care unit.

State health inspection records obtained by 11Alive, which first reported on Zeni’s case, showed nearly three dozen violations in 2014, 2015 and 2016. The NBC affiliate reported that state officials threatened to withhold federal funding if the violations weren’t addressed.

Many PruittHealth-owned facilities have similarly dismal records. Nineteen other facilities in Georgia, seven in South Carolina and one in North Carolina received one- and two-star ratings from Medicare.

According to the Government Accountability Office’s 2016 report to Congress, skilled nursing facilities received $28.6 billion in federal funds in 2014. About 70 percent of these facilities are for-profit nursing homes.

‘It’s a nightmare’
Zeni was admitted to Shepherd Hills in 2010. By then, the 87-year-old had been diagnosed with dementia, diabetes and other illnesses. She was completely dependent on others and was no longer legally qualified to stay at an assisted-living facility.

Puryear, who lives in LaFayette, was close enough to visit often.

Zeni’s rashes began to appear in fall 2013, around the time that a scabies outbreak at the facility was reported to the local health department. Ten residents and 10 staffers had rashes; some were diagnosed with scabies, according to Georgia Department of Public Health records.

Attorneys for Puryear said the nursing home did not take the necessary steps to keep the outbreak contained and to properly treat residents. Sheets used by those infected were washed along with those of the general population, and medication was shared among residents. Families were not informed of the highly contagious disease, said attorney Stephen Chance; instead, vague signage about a rash was posted at the facility. Residents with scabies were not quarantined, and infected staffers returned to work.

“Once you got a number of people that are carrying scabies, and they go home and they have it at home and they’re coming back to work, going from one patient room to another patient room, that sort of approach is not going to eradicate scabies,” said attorney Lance Lourie.

Lourie added: “Nursing homes in this chain in particular, they’re under a tremendous pressure to keep the facility full. Telling all your residents that you got an outbreak of scabies in the facility would hurt your ability to get more residents and families will leave.”

Another outbreak occurred in 2014, Chance said, but that was not reported to the health department. A third outbreak happened in spring 2015. Twenty residents and 15 staffers were infected, state records show.

By then, Zeni’s condition had dramatically worsened. Rashes had spread to her scalp, neck, chest, shoulders, back and arms. A doctor had ordered that she be given Ivermectin, a tablet used to treat worm infections, and Elimite cream, which is used to treat scabies. But the treatments and medications were at times not given as ordered, court records say.

Zeni died June 2, 2015. An autopsy found that she died of Staphylococcus aureus septicemia due to Norwegian crusted scabies, a severe form of scabies that affects people with weak immune systems, such as the elderly. Scabies can spread rapidly in crowded places, such as nursing homes, extended-care facilities and prisons, according to the state health department.

JNKF44L5IQ3IRL3AJQE6XQFUIA.jpg

“The last six months of her life, she was in constant pain,” an attorney for Rebecca Zeni's family said. “She was literally being eaten alive from inside out.” (Courtesy of Lance Lourie)
An affidavit by Debi Luther, a Florida nurse who reviewed Zeni’s medical records, stated that the nursing home’s failure to recognize her deteriorating condition and to prevent the spread of scabies resulted in her death.

Nancy Nydam, spokeswoman for the Georgia health department, said the agency provides guidelines to prevent and control scabies outbreaks and follows up with facilities, but it does not have regulatory control.

A separate agency, the Georgia Department of Community Health, inspects facilities and could set rules that a facility must follow. Spokeswoman Fiona Roberts said the agency was not notified of the scabies outbreaks.

“At the end of the day, our client trusted them and her trust was betrayed,” Prieto, one of the attorneys, said of Puryear.

Puryear said she watched helplessly as she visited her mother every day, unable to touch or hug the woman she loved and admired.

“It’s a nightmare,” she said, adding later: “There was no dignity.”

Read more:

‘I can’t fathom the cruelty’: Terrified elderly woman moved out while squatter lived in her home, family says

An elderly good Samaritan was killed after trying to help a woman during a robbery, police say

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Ang4MohTrump

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America and it's people are eaten away alive by bugs of all types! MAGA!

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2018/05/what_kind_of_ticks_have_lyme_disease_ticks_with_wh.html

Tick and mosquito bites are skyrocketing. Here's why you need to worry
Posted May 02, 2018 at 12:45 PM | Updated May 02, 2018 at 04:32 PM
59 shares
9 Comment

tick-cdc-0jpg-2c5b5ca23712a7e5.jpg

By Spencer Kent | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, West Nile, Zika.

The number of Americans getting diseases from mosquito, tick and flea bites has been skyrocketing in recent years, more than tripling between 2004 to 2016, according to a new federal health report.

Most concerning for New Jersey is the rise of tickborne illnesses, which have been increasing all throughout the Northeast, experts say.

And during the 13-year period, at least nine new diseases have been discovered or introduced into the U.S.

So what’s causing this dramatic spike? And how concerned should you be?



The rising trend poses significant concerns as diseases carried by these nasty critters can be fatal. The majority of them also lack a vaccine.

The new report, published Tuesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), found that several factors have played a role in the rise of cases, including warmer and longer summers, an increase in deer population and a lack of vaccines to combat many of these diseases.

spotlight-smokestacks-0jpg-2c4994d93e313e7d.jpg

Is climate change playing a role?
Climate change, warmer weather and longer summers, experts say, have all allowed these nasty insects and arachnids to travel farther north and live in environments previously unsuitable for them.

“Mosquitoes and ticks are very sensitive to the environment — so small changes can have a big impact,” said Alvaro Toledo, assistant professor at Rutgers University who studies ticks.




How is this impacting New Jersey?
Toledo said New Jersey faces a particular threat from ticks and Lyme disease from the warming temperatures.

“We have kind of a perfect storm in terms of environmental changes that make it a perfect environment for ticks to thrive,” Toledo said.

For example, Toledo said the lone star tick, originally from the southern region of the U.S., "has been moving north and is (now) quite common on the East Coast."

"There is a general concern that changes in the environment and climate are allowing species to spread and colonize new habitats," he added.

How dramatic has the rise been?
In 2004, there were only around 27,400 reported cases of vector-borne diseases in the U.S. and its territories. But, by 2016, that number spiked to more than 96,000. During that period, there were nearly 650,000 cases of these diseases throughout the country.

Health officials, however, believe that number could be significantly larger because infections frequently go unreported and unrecognized as symptoms can often be mild.

nj-dept-agtickpicjpg-76b7dca3052fd4cb-0jpg-f8b6f44af05e862b.jpg

What are people getting most bitten by?
Ticks. Those dreaded, ridiculously resilient, blood-sucking ticks. Tickborne diseases have more than doubled in the 13-year period, making up 77 percent of all vector-borne disease cases, according to the report.

Is Lyme disease on the rise too?
Unfortunately, yes. Lyme disease accounted for 82 percent of all tickborne cases between 2004 and 2016, according to the report.

And, the number of reported Lyme disease cases could be much larger than officially reported.

For example, based on recent data, the CDC believes that Lyme disease infects around 300,000 Americans each year, yet only around 30,000 are officially diagnosed.

Toledo said that though New Jersey has always been in the middle of the tick storm, “now we are seeing more Lyme disease in the north and east of the U.S.”

Rocky Mountain spotted fever is another potentially severe and fatal disease spread by the bite of an infected tick. And because symptoms are often vague, resembling many other diseases, it can be difficult to diagnose.




mosquitojpg-aa790d58ca2fe0af-0jpg-a22daa7fbf42200f.jpg

Ervin/Getty Images
Danger from West Nile and Zika?
Mosquito-borne diseases have also spiked, rising from nearly 4,900 cases in 2004 to about 47,500, according to the report. West Nile and Zika are among the most common mosquito-borne illnesses.

Both pose serious health threats and can be fatal, making the new report especially frightening.

Disease from fleas is less common but bites could result in the plague.

What does the future hold?
Experts anticipate the threat will only increase.

“This is going to be a trend that is going to continue in the foreseeable future,” Toledo said.

The CDC said this has also put an increased burden on local and state public health departments. The CDC in the report said proper surveillance “backed by well-organized, well-prepared, and sustained vector control operations” will be critical to combating the epidemic.

Vaccines and intense research and development will also play a major role in reducing this major threat, the report said.

Spencer Kent may be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @SpencerMKent. Find the Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Have information about this story or something else we should be covering? Tell us. nj.com/tips

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http://www.techtimes.com/articles/2...called-eggs-infects-35-people-in-9-states.htm


  1. Home
  2. Health
  3. Healthy Living/Wellness
Salmonella Outbreak Caused By Recalled Eggs Infects 35 People In 9 States
11 May 2018, 4:49 pm EDT By Jean-Pierre Chigne Tech Times

eggs.jpg

A salmonella outbreak has infected 35 people in nine different states across the U.S. Eggs have been identified as the cause of the outbreak, over 200,000 eggs were recalled in April due to fears of contamination. ( Justin Sullivan | Getty Images )
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that a salmonella outbreak caused by recalled eggs affected 35 people in nine states. Eggs that started the outbreak were recalled in April due to possible contamination with bacteria.

More than 200,000 eggs were recalled at that time.

Salmonella Outbreak
Eggs that were recalled were produced by Rose Acre Farms' Hyde County farm. The CDC recommends that people just throw the eggs away or try to return the eggs for a refund. Eggs from Rose Acre Farms were sold under various brand names such as Coburn Farms, Country Daybreak, Food Lion, Glenview, Great Value, Nelms, Publix, Sunshine Farms, and Sunups.

There have been no deaths reported from the salmonella outbreak. Eleven people have been hospitalized due to complications. The last update from the CDC was on April 16, since then there have been 12 more cases added to the outbreak.

People began getting sick from the eggs between November 16, 2017, and April 14, 2018. Those who were sick range from the age of 1 to 90 years old, the median age for those that are sick is 65 years old.

The CDC notes that there may be a discrepancy in those that have reported illness because it takes an average of two to four weeks for people to become ill and report that they've become ill.

States that have been affected so far include Colorado, Florida, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia.

Tracing The Outbreak
The Centers For Disease Control and Prevention along with state authorities found the source of the outbreak in Hyde County, North Carolina, in an egg farm owned by Rose Acre Farms. The recall by the CDC affects eggs that are labeled with the P-1065 plant number with the Julian date range of 011 to 102 printed on the package. This means from January 11 to April 12.

There are differences in the Publix and Sunups egg cartons which feature the P-1359D plant number and the Julian dates of 048A or 049A. These dates mean April 2 and April 3.

Rose Acre Farms says that it is the second largest egg producer in the US. Rose Acre's North Carolina farm produces about 2.3 million eggs daily and it contains about three million egg-laying hens. It says that it has never experienced any problems with its North Carolina farm and that a recall was done in cooperation with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.


See Now: Things You Should Never Search For On Google — You've Been Warned

TAG
Salmonella, Eggs, recall
© 2018 Tech Times, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.
 

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https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Sexually-transmitted-diseases-dramatically-12914157.php

Sexually transmitted diseases dramatically increase in California
By Peter Fimrite

May 14, 2018 Updated: May 14, 2018 5:04pm
920x1240.jpg

Photo: Billy Smith II, Chronicle

File photo of vials of blood collected for testing syphilis.
The internet has helped love bloom for many couples, but it’s also played a role in a 45 percent jump in sexually transmitted diseases over five years in California, a surge not seen in nearly three decades, health officials said Monday.

More than 300,000 cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and early syphilis were reported in California in 2017, a 45 percent increase compared with five years ago, according to a report by the California Department of Public Health.


The increases in infection rates are the result of numerous factors, including a decrease in condom usage, lack of education and fewer STD clinics, but Dr. James Watt, chief of the division of communicable disease control for the Department of Health, said social media played a significant role by helping people find anonymous sex partners.

“It makes it easier for people to meet people they don’t already know to have sex,” Watt said. “The internet allows for a broadening of sexual networks, and the broader that gets the more opportunity you have for sexually transmitted diseases to spread.”

More by Peter Fimrite
The jump is all the more alarming for health officials considering that sexually transmitted diseases have increased every year for six years.

“The levels we are seeing now are higher than they’ve been since 1990,” said Watt. “We’ve been seeing increases for all three diseases for the last five or six years. It’s concerning because that slope, that uptick, doesn’t seem to be coming down. In fact, it seems to be getting steeper.”

Infection rates went up dramatically between 2016 and 2017 for each the three most commonly reported sexual diseases, particularly among African Americans, who were five times more likely than whites to get chlamydia and gonorrhea and twice as likely to contract syphilis.

The report documented 218,710 cases of chlamydia last year, the highest number since 1990. Chlamydia rates, which increased 9 percent over 2016, were 60 percent higher among women than men, and 54 percent of the cases were in people under age 25, the report said.

Watt said the higher rates of chlamydia among women are likely the result of a national campaign to persuade more women to come in for screening.

There were 75,450 cases of gonorrhea in 2017, the highest number since 1988, the report said. The rate of gonorrhea infection, which is highest among people under age 30, increased 16 percent over 2016. Males were two times more likely to get the disease than females.

If left untreated, chlamydia and gonorrhea can cause pelvic inflammatory disease and lead to infertility, ectopic pregnancy and chronic pelvic pain.

The number of cases of syphilis reported in California, 13,605, was the highest since 1987 and amounted to a 20 percent increase in the rate of infection compared with 2016. Males are also more likely to be diagnosed with syphilis, but female cases have increased sevenfold since 2012, according to the report.

“That’s particularly concerning because syphilis can have long-term complications like blindness, hearing loss and other neurological problems,” Watt said.

The rates of gonorrhea and syphilis are higher among men because male-on-male sex carries with it a higher risk of transmission, he said.

Health department officials are particularly worried about the 30 stillbirths last year caused by congenital syphilis, a 30 percent increase in one year and the highest number since 1995. It marked the fifth consecutive year that the number of infants born with syphilis has increased.

The department of public health is working with local health departments, schools, community groups and youth organizations across the state to raise awareness about the problem.

“We want people to get tested, because even when people don’t have symptoms they are still infectious,” Watt said. “More people are getting tested, so we’re hoping that some of this will be an improvement that could lead to the lowering of infection rates.”


Peter Fimrite is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: [email protected] Twitter: @pfimrite
 

tanwahtiu

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More imported ah nehs and Burmese brought mosquito and bugs with them into US.

America and it's people are eaten away alive by bugs of all types! MAGA!

http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2018/05/what_kind_of_ticks_have_lyme_disease_ticks_with_wh.html

Tick and mosquito bites are skyrocketing. Here's why you need to worry
Posted May 02, 2018 at 12:45 PM | Updated May 02, 2018 at 04:32 PM
59 shares
9 Comment

tick-cdc-0jpg-2c5b5ca23712a7e5.jpg

By Spencer Kent | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, West Nile, Zika.

The number of Americans getting diseases from mosquito, tick and flea bites has been skyrocketing in recent years, more than tripling between 2004 to 2016, according to a new federal health report.

Most concerning for New Jersey is the rise of tickborne illnesses, which have been increasing all throughout the Northeast, experts say.

And during the 13-year period, at least nine new diseases have been discovered or introduced into the U.S.

So what’s causing this dramatic spike? And how concerned should you be?



The rising trend poses significant concerns as diseases carried by these nasty critters can be fatal. The majority of them also lack a vaccine.

The new report, published Tuesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), found that several factors have played a role in the rise of cases, including warmer and longer summers, an increase in deer population and a lack of vaccines to combat many of these diseases.

spotlight-smokestacks-0jpg-2c4994d93e313e7d.jpg

Is climate change playing a role?
Climate change, warmer weather and longer summers, experts say, have all allowed these nasty insects and arachnids to travel farther north and live in environments previously unsuitable for them.

“Mosquitoes and ticks are very sensitive to the environment — so small changes can have a big impact,” said Alvaro Toledo, assistant professor at Rutgers University who studies ticks.




How is this impacting New Jersey?
Toledo said New Jersey faces a particular threat from ticks and Lyme disease from the warming temperatures.

“We have kind of a perfect storm in terms of environmental changes that make it a perfect environment for ticks to thrive,” Toledo said.

For example, Toledo said the lone star tick, originally from the southern region of the U.S., "has been moving north and is (now) quite common on the East Coast."

"There is a general concern that changes in the environment and climate are allowing species to spread and colonize new habitats," he added.

How dramatic has the rise been?
In 2004, there were only around 27,400 reported cases of vector-borne diseases in the U.S. and its territories. But, by 2016, that number spiked to more than 96,000. During that period, there were nearly 650,000 cases of these diseases throughout the country.

Health officials, however, believe that number could be significantly larger because infections frequently go unreported and unrecognized as symptoms can often be mild.

nj-dept-agtickpicjpg-76b7dca3052fd4cb-0jpg-f8b6f44af05e862b.jpg

What are people getting most bitten by?
Ticks. Those dreaded, ridiculously resilient, blood-sucking ticks. Tickborne diseases have more than doubled in the 13-year period, making up 77 percent of all vector-borne disease cases, according to the report.

Is Lyme disease on the rise too?
Unfortunately, yes. Lyme disease accounted for 82 percent of all tickborne cases between 2004 and 2016, according to the report.

And, the number of reported Lyme disease cases could be much larger than officially reported.

For example, based on recent data, the CDC believes that Lyme disease infects around 300,000 Americans each year, yet only around 30,000 are officially diagnosed.

Toledo said that though New Jersey has always been in the middle of the tick storm, “now we are seeing more Lyme disease in the north and east of the U.S.”

Rocky Mountain spotted fever is another potentially severe and fatal disease spread by the bite of an infected tick. And because symptoms are often vague, resembling many other diseases, it can be difficult to diagnose.




mosquitojpg-aa790d58ca2fe0af-0jpg-a22daa7fbf42200f.jpg

Ervin/Getty Images
Danger from West Nile and Zika?
Mosquito-borne diseases have also spiked, rising from nearly 4,900 cases in 2004 to about 47,500, according to the report. West Nile and Zika are among the most common mosquito-borne illnesses.

Both pose serious health threats and can be fatal, making the new report especially frightening.

Disease from fleas is less common but bites could result in the plague.

What does the future hold?
Experts anticipate the threat will only increase.

“This is going to be a trend that is going to continue in the foreseeable future,” Toledo said.

The CDC said this has also put an increased burden on local and state public health departments. The CDC in the report said proper surveillance “backed by well-organized, well-prepared, and sustained vector control operations” will be critical to combating the epidemic.

Vaccines and intense research and development will also play a major role in reducing this major threat, the report said.

Spencer Kent may be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Twitter @SpencerMKent. Find the Find NJ.com on Facebook.

Have information about this story or something else we should be covering? Tell us. nj.com/tips

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Ang4MohTrump

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got video:

https://www.rt.com/usa/428844-burger-king-closed-mice/


a story with this clean and simple app that delivers the latest headlines to you.


RT
LIVE

HomeUS News

Burger King outlet shuts down after footage of mice crawling on buns goes viral (VIDEO)
Published time: 6 Jun, 2018 03:12Edited time: 6 Jun, 2018 03:13
5b16fa74fc7e93d21c8b45cf.jpg

© / Reuters
A Burger King in Delaware has been temporarily closed by the health department after an investigation, triggered by an online video of mice pillaging a pack of rolls, found numerous rodent droppings across the restaurant.
“Pallets that rolls were on had mouse droppings. Mouse droppings were observed on the floor near the ice machine, water heater, under storage, near syrup soda boxes and behind fryers,” a report from the Delaware Health and Social Service's inspection said.

The probe resulted in a cease-and-desist letter filed last week against the Burger King outlet, located at 2802 Concord Pike in Wilmington, over “gross unsanitary conditions” that posed an “imminent health hazard.”

Burger King told CBS Philly that the Delaware rodent-infested restaurant was “an isolated incident.”

Read more
McDonald’s becomes weed users’ highest-ranking fast food joint
“Food safety and hygiene is always a top priority for us,” the company said, confirming that the outlet “is temporarily closed and will reopen once this issue is addressed.”However, not many of those who saw the Facebook video of rats making their way into a pack of burger rolls are likely to return to the restaurant ever again.

“Don't have to worry about me eating at Burger King anymore,” one of the commentators wrote. “Gross that’s why I hate to eat out,” another added.

Some, however, found the whole situation funny, with one user proclaiming: “Hello, welcome to Rat King!” While a fellow user recalled an Oscar-winning Disney animated movie about a rat who wanted to become a Paris chef: “Just like Ratatouille, maybe Remy was making the buns.”

Think your friends
 

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...disease-girl-couldnt-walk-mom-says/693426002/

Tick paralysis: 5-year-old suddenly couldn't walk, had trouble speaking, mom says
USA Today NetworkAshley May, USA TODAY Published 8:06 a.m. ET June 12, 2018 | Updated 8:39 a.m. ET June 12, 2018


CDC says tick-borne illnesses have now TRIPLED. Are you removing ticks correctly? Here’s everything you need to know about ticks and how you can combat Lyme disease. Just the FAQs

TWEETLINKEDINCOMMENTEMAILMORE
A Mississippi mother panicked when her 5-year-old daughter woke up unable to walk, and could barely speak. Then, she saw a tick on her head.

Jessica Griffin's daughter Kailyn was suffering from a rare disease known as tick paralysis, hospital staff told her last week.

"Scary is a understatement," Griffin said in a post on Facebook.

Tick paralysis is thought be caused by a toxin in tick saliva, according to the Centers for Disease and Control. The paralysis, which is often confused for a neurologic disorder, usually resolves within 24 hours after the tick is removed.

Thankfully, Kailyn "fully recovered" the next day, her mom said, and "hasn't slowed down since her feet hit that floor." The mom, who never heard of tick paralysis before, also left parents with a warning:

"Make sure you check those babies in every crease of their body!"

More: Tick season: What you need to know about ticks, diseases they cause and how to remove them safely

More: Should I burn a tick off? 5 common myths about ticks

The CDC recommends checking your body for ticks after being outdoors. If you find an attached tick, grasp it with tweezers, as close to the skin as possible and pull it straight out.

Follow Ashley May on Twitter: @AshleyMayTweets


essica Griffin
last Wednesday
We had a bit of a scare this morning! Kailyn woke up and couldn’t walk! I was just thinking that her legs were asleep until I noticed that she couldn’t hardly talk! After tons of blood work and a CT of the head UMMC has ruled it as tick paralysis! PLEASE for the love of god check your kids for ticks! It’s more common in children than it is adults! We are being admitted to the hospital for observation and we’re hoping her balance gets straightened out! Prayers for this baby! Scary is a UNDERSTATEMENT! She has been such a champ throughout this whole ordeal!
2764.png
❤️

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34557762_10211901712639952_532987020318867456_n.jpg

34555052_10211901713079963_6126556936897822720_n.jpg

34700240_10211901713399971_3966413198482997248_n.jpg
 

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https://abcnews.go.com/US/mississippi-mom-daughter-lost-ability-walk-tick-bite/story?id=55800905

Mississippi mom says daughter, 5, lost ability to walk after tick bite
  • By Karma Allen
  • Briana Montalvo
Jun 11, 2018, 6:18 AM ET
HT_tick_bite3_180611KA_hpMain_12x5_992.jpg

HT_tick_bite3_180611KA_hpMain_12x5_992.jpg
Jessica Griffin (via Facebook)
WatchCDC advises you may need multiple Lyme disease tests after a tick bite


A mom in Mississippi said she got the scare of her life last week when her young daughter temporarily lost the ability to walk after getting bit by a tick.

Jessica Griffin said her 5-year-old daughter, Kailyn, suddenly lost the ability to walk and talk last Wednesday after contracting tick paralysis from a bite to her scalp.

Griffin said Kailyn was “perfectly fine” the night before, but things took a “scary” turn on June 6 when she woke her up for school.

“She woke up yesterday morning to get ready to go to daycare and as soon as her feet hit the floor she fell,” Griffin told ABC News on Sunday. “She would try to stand and walk but would continue to fall so I thought her legs were just asleep.

“I went to brush her hair to put it in a ponytail and noticed she could barely talk and when I pulled her hair back that’s when I seen the tick,” she added.



HT_tick_bite_180611KA_hpMain_4x3_992.jpg
Jessica Griffin (via Facebook)
Kailyn Kirk, 5, who is recovering from a case of tick paralysis.




(MORE: Diseases from mosquito, flea and tick bites have tripled, spread new disease: CDC)




(MORE: How to protect your family during tick season)


Griffin said she immediately took Kailyn to an emergency room, where doctors ran blood tests and performed a CT scan to confirm the diagnosis of tick paralysis.

The condition is thought to be caused by a toxin found in tick saliva, according to the Centers for Disease Control, which says symptoms usually subside about 24 hours after removing the tick.

“I honestly have never even heard of that before,” Griffin said. “Her pediatrician said it had sucked so much over the night that it had gotten that big and released a toxin.”

Kailyn’s doctors predicted that she would be back to normal in between 12 and 24 hours, “and sure enough within that 12 hours she was back to being her silly self, running and playing,” Griffin said.



HT_tick_bite2_180611KA_hpMain_4x3_992.jpg
Jessica Griffin (via Facebook)
Five-year-old Kailyn Kirk, who suddenly lost the ability to walk and talk last week due to a tick bite.


Now, Griffin says she working to spread awareness about the common, but unassuming condition.

She posted images to Facebook last week, showing Kailyn in her hospital bed with a splint and an IV connected to her arm. She also wrote a lengthy warning to parents, urging them to check their children for ticks.

“Please, for the love of God, check your kids for ticks! It’s more common in children than it is adults,” she wrote last Wednesday. “Prayers for this baby! Scary is a UNDERSTATEMENT! She has been such a champ throughout this whole ordeal.”

Her original post racked up more than 103,000 reactions and nearly 400,000 shares on Facebook as of early Monday.



http://abc7chicago.com/health/tick-alert-moms-warning-after-daughter-suffers-tick-paralysis/3586246/
  • email
HEALTH & FITNESS
Mississippi mom urgently warns parents to check for ticks after daughter suffers tick paralysis
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<iframe width="476" height="267" src="http://abc7chicago.com/video/embed/?pid=3586393" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Jessica Griffin took to Facebook to share her daughter's harrowing experience with tick paralysis, which left the young girl with difficulty walking and talking.


Danny Clemens
Sunday, June 10, 2018 12:14PM
GRENADA, Miss. --
A Mississippi mom is urgently warning parents to be on the lookout for ticks after tick paralysis left her young daughter unable to walk.

In a widely shared Facebook post, Jessica Griffin wrote that her daughter, Kailyn, woke up and also had difficulty talking. Griffin took her daughter to the University of Mississippi Medical Center, and doctors performed blood tests and a CT scan to diagnose Kailyn with tick paralysis.


Griffin showed a tick in a plastic bag that appeared to have been removed from the crown of Kailyn's head and pleaded with parents to check their children for ticks.

"PLEASE for the love of god check your kids for ticks! It's more common in children than it is adults!" she wrote. "We are being admitted to the hospital for observation and we're hoping her balance gets straightened out! Prayers for this baby! Scary is [an] UNDERSTATEMENT!"

According to the Centers for Disease Control, tick paralysis is believed to be caused by a toxin found in tick saliva, and symptoms often resolve within 24 hours of removing the tick.

Griffin later posted an update saying that Kailyn's symptoms had subsided and that she was "completely back to normal."

Unlike many other bites, tick bites often don't initially hurt or itch, according to WebMD. While they can initially be small, a tick that has latched onto a human will swell up as it feeds and become more visible.

In addition to tick paralysis, ticks can also cause a variety of other medical conditions such as Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever and Southern Tick-Associated Rash Illness. Patients should seek medical attention if a tick bite causes a rash, flu-like symptoms or infection at the bite site or if the tick cannot be completely removed.
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Bankrupted beggar Ang Mohs must all die the 3rd world beggars way!




https://www.businessinsider.sg/what-is-e-coli-2018-7/

More than 500 people who rode a zipline are sick with E. coli — here’s what to know about the infection



Hilary Brueck, Business Insider US
July 11, 2018

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More than 500 people who went ziplining in the Great Smoky Mountains of Tennessee are sick with E. coli infections. Reuters/Oswaldo Rivas

  • More than 500 people who rode a zipline in Tennessee are sick with E. coli infections.
  • Health inspectors think they got sick after drinking contaminated well water.
  • E. coli is a species of bacteria that live in the intestines of people and animals. Some E. coli are harmless, but other strains can cause kidney failure or death.
A trip down the zipline ended in misery and vomit for more than 500 people who visited Gatlinburg, Tennessee this summer.
The Tennessee Department of Health found E. coli bacteria present in the water at CLIMB Works ziplining tours in the Great Smoky Mountains, as The Knoxville News Sentinel reported.
At least 548 sick people have said they ziplined at CLIMB Works between mid-June and early July. The tree-topping tours include water stops, and the coolers are filled with well water, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution. That’s likely where the contamination came from.
Emily Oney, who vacationed in the area with her family, wrote on Facebook that she visited the zipline with a group of seven other people on June 31. By the following afternoon, six of them were “throwing up and terribly sick,” she said.
“Upon further investigation, I found a review online from Sunday where more families were claiming to be sick from the contaminated coolers of water on the course,” Oney said. “Do not drink the water here.”
CLIMB Works, which bills itself as the top-rated zipline tour in Tennessee, responded to Oney saying the company feels “awful” if it had “any part in anyone getting sick.”
“We worry something might have contaminated the water during the dates of your visit,” the company wrote.
It turned out to be a dangerous strain of a common bacteria.
What is E. coli?
E. coli has a bad reputation as an illness-causing bacteria, but you probably have some good E. coli inside your body right now.
Escherichia coli is a broad term for a species of diverse bacteria. Certain strains of E. coli colonize our guts almost immediately after birth and stick to the mucus of our intestines, keeping our intestinal tract humming along smoothly.
Some of the most common signs of infection with the bad type of E. coli include bloody diarrhea, stomach cramps, and vomiting. It can take 10 days for symptoms of E. coli to show up, and an additional two to three weeks for the illness to be reported to health officials.
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E. coli bacteria Flickr/NIAID
“People have gotten infected by swallowing lake water while swimming, touching the environment in petting zoos and other animal exhibits, and by eating food prepared by people who did not wash their hands well after using the toilet,” according to the CDC.
Because E. coli contamination comes from little bits of poo, any person or animal along the path that food or water take from a field or well to your mouth can easily contaminate produce, meat, or water.
Most people can survive E. coli poisoning – the miserable symptoms usually last five to seven days. There’s not much you can do to treat the illness, though, except to stay well hydrated until it’s over.
Pregnant women, young children, older adults, and people with compromised immune systems need to be extra careful about steering clear of E. coli-contaminated food and water. The infection’s more severe complications can include kidney failure, which happens in about 5% to 10% of cases and usually affects people under the age of 5 and over 60, according to the Merck Manual.
The best way to kill E. coli is to boil it. The CDC recommends bringing water to a rolling boil for a minute (or if you’re at elevations above 6,500 feet, three minutes), then cool and store the liquid in a clean, sanitized container with a tight cover and keep it refrigerated. There is no filter that’s certified to work for all E. coli strains.
 

Ash007

Alfrescian
Loyal
nj is a hotbed for ah nehs. there's a direct correlation between surge in h1-b's for ah nehs and the rise of superbugs in america.
Was about to say, the 1st superbug anti-biotic resistant bacteria is called the NDM-1, ND stands for new Dehli.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Delhi_metallo-beta-lactamase_1


New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase 1 (NDM-1)[1] is an enzyme that makes bacteria resistant to a broad range of beta-lactam antibiotics. These include the antibiotics of the carbapenem family, which are a mainstay for the treatment of antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections. The gene for NDM-1 is one member of a large gene family that encodes beta-lactamase enzymes called carbapenemases. Bacteria that produce carbapenemases are often referred to in the news media as "superbugs" because infections caused by them are difficult to treat. Such bacteria are usually susceptible only to polymyxins and tigecycline.[2]
NDM-1 was first detected in a Klebsiella pneumoniae isolate from a Swedish patient of Indian origin in 2008. It was later detected in bacteria in India, Pakistan, the United Kingdom, the United States,[3] Canada,[4] and Japan.[5]
The most common bacteria that make this enzyme are gram-negative such as Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae, but the gene for NDM-1 can spread from one strain of bacteria to another by horizontal gene transfer.[6]
 
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