Showing posts with label Zika. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zika. Show all posts

Thursday, November 7, 2019

Gone, but not forgotten


Slap!!!

That is the sound of my hand crushing the life out of the last mosquito of 2019.

The mosquitoes stayed late this year, possibly because of the wetness and lack of frost. I can’t ever recall being bitten in October before, but this year I had several late October stings.  

Now the mosquitoes finally are gone, out of sight, out of mind, until May.

It is a mistake to put them out of mind. We need to think seriously about mosquitoes and the growing health threats they present.

Our planet is warming, encouraging bugs and plants once confined to warmer southern areas to move north.  Ticks carrying Lyme disease are moving beyond their normal ranges of southwestern Ontario and have reached on the edges of Haliburton County.

Mosquitoes carrying viruses not known in northern climates also are moving north. In the past 10 years or so nine previously unknown species have been added to the list of mosquitoes found in Ontario. That list has grown to 67 different species.

West Nile virus, not seen in North America until 20 years ago, is here now. Aedes aegypti, the mosquito capable of carrying the Zika virus, was found in southwestern Ontario two years ago.

That mosquito also has been known to carry other tropical diseases such as dengue fever, chikungunya, and yellow fever.

There also has been an increase in North America of eastern equine encephalitis, Triple E, as it is sometimes called,  a once rare but deadly mosquito-borne virus. There were three confirmed Triple E deaths in Michigan this past September.

At the end of October the U.S. Centres for Disease Control reported 35 confirmed cases of Triple E this year, 10 0f them in Michigan. Thirteen of those 35 infected people died.

To northerners, mosquitoes always have been just a summer annoyance. Different species moving north are a health threat not to be taken lightly.

Just ask Timothy Winegard, a professor at Colorado Mesa University and a Canadian, originally from Sarnia. His new book, The Mosquito, documents how mosquitoes and the diseases they carry have changed world history.

He writes that mosquitoes have killed more people than any other cause of death in human history. He estimates that mosquitoes carrying disease have killed almost one half of the 108 billion humans who have lived over the past 200,000 years.

His book documents how mosquito–borne diseases such as malaria changed war outcomes, decided the fates of empires and altered human history.

“The mosquito remains the destroyer of worlds and the preeminent and globally distinguished killer of humankind,” Winegard writes in the introduction to his book.

Last year the mosquito and her diseases killed 830,000 people worldwide.

I wrote her because only female mosquitoes bite. They do so to get blood needed to grow and mature their eggs.

Female mosquitoes will bite anyone with blood, but they do have some preferences. Research shows they have a special taste for Type O blood. People with Type O are bitten more often than folks with Type A or Type B.

Also, mosquitoes have an affinity for beer drinkers, although no one seems to know why.

Pregnant women get bitten twice as often as other people. Scientists say that is because pregnant women give off 20 per cent more carbon dioxide (CO2) than the average person. CO2 and the body chemicals that are mixed with it attract mosquitoes.

These are mild preferences that science still does not completely understand. What we do know as fact is that anyone with blood in their veins is a potential victim.

Being a victim once meant simply being irritated by an itchy bump on the skin. But that is changing as more mosquitoes carrying serious disease find their way farther north.

Many people bitten and infected with West Nile or Zika might not show any symptoms, or might temporarily feel feverish with muscle weakness.

However, West Nile and Zika can have serious consequences for some people. West Nile can infect the nervous system resulting in meningitis or encephalitis and bring on long lasting paralysis similar to polio. Zika has been linked to a serious birth defect and to Guillain-Barré syndrome.

So although they are gone, we should be thinking about being more careful about mosquito protection for when they return.


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Thursday, February 11, 2016

Midnight Swims without Bathing Suits?

Maybe it’s the fine winter weather. Little snow to shovel. Some ice, but I’ve spread salt and sand on the driveway only once. Never any thought of having to shovel the roof.

With few winter chores, I’ve had more time to think. When I have too much time to think, I worry.

I have many things to fret about. Like, what if Donald Trump becomes the next leader of the free world? And, why is Justin the Good still grinning and taking selfies while the economy continues to sink? Then there is that constant worry about one day having to go to downtown Toronto.

And climate change. The world is melting. When spring comes and the mosquitoes return will they be carrying not just West Nile, but Zika virus and even chikungunya? I’m not sure what that last one is, but even its spelling looks dangerous.

This week my main worry is about drones. Drones are becoming so popular that I’m thinking maybe it’s time to wear a bathing suit on those midnight swims.

The Consumer Technology Association expects that one million drones will be sold in the U.S. this year. That’s an increase of 145 per cent over 2015.

More than 181,000 people in the U.S. have registered drones under the new Federal Aviation Administration drone rules laid down Dec. 21 last year.

We don’t know how many drones are being sold in Canada, or how many are being registered with Transport Canada. And that’s another worry. How is that a country with some of the world’s heaviest taxation loads doesn’t have current statistics?

All those drones buzzing around are worrisome. What will happen if one smacks into an aircraft windshield, or gets sucked into a jet engine?

Some countries, Canada included, are making rules to help prevent serious situations involving drones. Transport Canada has regulations prohibiting drones from flying higher than 90 metres, and within nine kilometres of a forest fire, airport or built up area. They can’t be flown over prisons, military bases, crowds of people or in restricted air space.

There is also the worry about what equipment these little buzzers can carry. There is talk about using them for pizza deliveries. If a drone can carry a pizza box, it certainly can carry a camera, firearm, or even a small bomb. Or drugs.

My biggest worry about drones, however, is privacy.

I worry that one morning I’ll step out of the shower to see a camera-equipped drone hovering outside the bathroom window. Although that might be more frightening for the viewer than for me.

Worse, what if a very astute fisherman like Steve Galea used a drone with camera to follow me to my secret fishing holes. Or, cottage visitors secretly viewing from above all the places where I stash my favourite beers and wines that I don’t want them to know about.

There are many private little places where I don’t want drones hovering.

Our federal government believes it is on top of the privacy concerns.  The federal privacy commissioner noted a couple years ago that checks and balances will become necessary as more people get drones. Transport Canada says it is working with the privacy commissioner’s office to make sure drone operators respect privacy laws.

That has me worried. Governments are known to say they plan to do lots of things that never get done.

My newest and greatest worry in all of this, however, is that I will succumb to the urge to buy my own drone. As a kid I flew model airplanes and loved it.

Owning a drone would open a world of new possibilities. I could fly it over my bush lot to check on intruders. Or check out deer movements for the hunting season.

When I’m on the bush lot cutting firewood I could send my drone back to the cottage with an order for beer.

Having my own drone could create other concerns, however. Would I spend too much time playing with it? Then who would cut my winter firewood? When would I find time to scope out where the deer are hiding?

I worry about these things. Maybe it would be better if there was more snow to shovel.



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