Story Published:
Aug 6, 2002 at 12:45 PM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 12:46 AM PDT
OLYMPIA - A visitor to Eastern Washington has been preliminarily diagnosed with West Nile Virus.
The state Health Department says he likely was exposed in Louisiana.
He developed mild symptoms and represents no threat to public health, as the disease is not spread person-to-person.
"There's a three to 15-day incubation period from exposure to illness with West Nile virus, and the man's itinerary shows he was in Louisiana, not Washington, when he was exposed," said Dr. Jo Hoffman, State Communicable Disease Epidemiologist for the state Department of Health.
She says the disease has not been detected in Washington mosquitoes, birds, animals, or humans.
Meanwhile, the virus has killed a fifth Louisiana resident and infected 14 more people in what health
officials said Tuesday is the nation's biggest outbreak since the
disease was first detected in the United States in 1999.
Seventy-one Louisiana residents have been confirmed to have the
mosquito-borne disease. Before now, the largest outbreak had been
the first, when 62 people became ill and five of them died in New
York three years ago.
The latest to die was a 76-year-old woman from St. Tammany
Parish, on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain across from New
Orleans.
Most people bitten by an infected mosquito will not become
noticeably ill, but some develop flu-like symptoms, and the weak
and the elderly can get encephalitis, a potentially fatal brain
infection. State and local officials have boosted mosquito-spraying
efforts and urged people to protect themselves against the insects.
Encephalitis is usually seen in August and September, but
Louisiana's first patients became ill in June.
The West Nile virus is showing up earlier in the summer as it
moves to warmer climates, said Dr. Jim Hughes, director of the
infectious diseases center at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
Mississippi has 22 confirmed human cases of West Nile virus.
Texas has 10 suspected cases and Arkansas one. Since 1999, the
virus has been found in birds and people in 34 states and
Washington, and health officials expect it will continue spreading
west. On Tuesday, the first human case in Illinois was confirmed.
Gov. Mike Foster declared a state of emergency in Louisiana last
week as part of an effort to obtain federal funds to fight the
virus.
Two Louisiana congressmen said they received a commitment
Tuesday from President Bush to help secure federal money. Democrat
William Jefferson and Republican Billy Tauzin said the state needs
$3 million to $5 million for more mosquito spraying.
For More Information:
CDC -- www.cdc.gov