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West Nile Virus a Nationwide Problem This Year

While Pennsylvania is on a record pace for West Nile Virus positives this year,   it is hardly alone and not even among the states with the highest numbers. The virus has been found in 48 states,  with Hawaii and Alaska as the only exceptions. 44 states have reported human cases. Over 70% of those cases are in six states; Texas, South Dakota, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Michigan and Louisiana.

Dr. Lyle Petersen, Director of the CDC’s Division of Vector Borne Infectious Diseases, says the number of human cases rose 25% in the last week, but it appears the epidemic may have peaked in August. He adds a great number of cases may still be reported because it can take 3 to 14 days for symptoms to appear.

Pennsylvania has had 16 human cases reported through September 6th, 11 of them were the more serious neuro-invasive form on the disease.  One of the victims died.  There have been 18 veterinary cases, mostly in horses. 103 dead birds have tested positive, including six Great Horned Owls, two American Kestrels and 11 hawks (Red tail, Cooper’s, Broad-winged and Sharp-shinned). The state has recorded 29 hundred positive mosquitoes.

With the recent heavy rains in some areas, people are advised to eliminate standing water around their homes.  The common house mosquito is one of the carriers of the virus and usually doesn’t stray far from where it breeds.  It can breed in about an inch of water. The rain may have washed away a number of larvae, but it will also create more breeding ground for the mosquitoes to reproduce.

Powerful Storms Drench Already Soggy Central Pennsylvania

Another series of strong thunderstorms rolled through central Pennsylvania overnight, bringing more heavy rains to areas that have been waterlogged for much of this spring. The hardest-hit region this week is in and around the state capital area, where the National Weather Service reports that some areas have received nearly six inches of rainfall since Monday.

A line of very power thunderstorms rolled through the Harrisburg area and points north and south early this morning, bringing more rain and dangerous lightning. The NWS forecast for Harrisburg calls for more showers and thunderstorms throughout Thursday and into Friday before some calmer weather moves in for the weekend.