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Chagas disease, long considered only a threat abroad, is established in California and the Southern U.S.
According to articles in the Los Angeles Times, "Chagas disease, long considered only a threat abroad, is established in California and the Southern U.S.", and "Kissing bugs bring deadly disease to California". LA Times requires a subscription.
Related article - https://www.swoknews.com/ap/nationa...cle_cb8c396f-1488-5320-bb6c-f3fa89571ce1.html
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/100-000-californians-could-potentially-141242198.html
https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/31/9/24-1700_article
jim macnamara has a relevant post about 8 years ago.
According to articles in the Los Angeles Times, "Chagas disease, long considered only a threat abroad, is established in California and the Southern U.S.", and "Kissing bugs bring deadly disease to California". LA Times requires a subscription.
Related article - https://www.swoknews.com/ap/nationa...cle_cb8c396f-1488-5320-bb6c-f3fa89571ce1.html
Chagas disease is caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, which lives in a bloodsucking insect called the kissing bug. There are roughly a dozen species of kissing bugs in the U.S. and four in California known to carry the parasite. Research has shown that in some places, such as Los Angeles' Griffith Park, about a third of all kissing bugs harbor the Chagas parasite.
It's why a team of epidemiologists, researchers and medical doctors are calling on the World Health Organization and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to label the disease as endemic, meaning consistently present, in the U.S. They hope that will bring awareness, education, dialogue and potentially public health investment to a disease that has long carried a stigma, falsely associated with poor, rural migrants from bug-infected homes in far-off tropical nations.
"This is a disease that has been neglected and has been impacting Latin Americans for many decades," said Norman Beatty, a medical epidemiologist at the University of Florida and an expert on Chagas. "But it's also here in the United States."
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/100-000-californians-could-potentially-141242198.html
https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/31/9/24-1700_article
jim macnamara has a relevant post about 8 years ago.
Please see the Prevention section of: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chagas_disease
Without going into lots of details:
1. 72% reduction of new infections in the 'Southern cone' geographic area of infection as a result of education, blood screening, and testing for new cases.
Newly infections are readily treatable.
2. Chagas is very well known among physicians, it is a topic in Human Pathology in most medical schools.
If you traveled to Guyana, and came back to Britain with the early mild Chagas symptoms, and unless you told a physician you just traveled there, s/he would not see...
Without going into lots of details:
1. 72% reduction of new infections in the 'Southern cone' geographic area of infection as a result of education, blood screening, and testing for new cases.
Newly infections are readily treatable.
2. Chagas is very well known among physicians, it is a topic in Human Pathology in most medical schools.
If you traveled to Guyana, and came back to Britain with the early mild Chagas symptoms, and unless you told a physician you just traveled there, s/he would not see...