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Keyword: hantavirus

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Were the English Sweating Sickness and the Picardy Sweat Caused by Hantaviruses?

    10/06/2022 10:04:04 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 20 replies
    Viruses via National Library of Medicine ^ | January 2014 | Paul Heyman, Leopold Simons, and Christel Cochez
    Abstract: The English sweating sickness caused five devastating epidemics between 1485 and 1551, England was hit hardest, but on one occasion also mainland Europe, with mortality rates between 30% and 50%. The Picardy sweat emerged about 150 years after the English sweat disappeared, in 1718, in France. It caused 196 localized outbreaks and apparently in its turn disappeared in 1861. Both diseases have been the subject of numerous attempts to define their origin, but so far all efforts were in vain. Although both diseases occurred in different time frames and were geographically not overlapping, a common denominator could be what...
  • Roads closed into New Mexico city to mitigate 'uninhibited spread of Covid-19'

    05/03/2020 3:01:37 PM PDT · by fightin kentuckian · 64 replies
    WTH is going on in Gallup, NM? The story doesn't shed any light on it. It only brings up more questioins. Is this a small test run for marshal law, state wide in lefty states? Is this a trial ballooon for blue states? What?
  • Man in China dies from hantavirus, over 1,000 cases reported

    03/25/2020 7:55:57 AM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 53 replies
    UPI ^ | March 25, 2020 | By Elizabeth Shim
    March 25 (UPI) -- A man in China has died after testing positive for the hantavirus, according to Chinese state media. Global Times reported the patient, a migrant worker from southwestern Yunnan Province, died while traveling on a chartered bus to Shandong Province for work on Monday. There is more than one strain of hantavirus, some more harmful than others, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There is no approved cure or vaccine against hantaviruses in the United States. An inoculation may be available in China. The group of diseases is spread primarily among rodents, and...
  • Man in China Tests Positive After Dying of Hantavirus That Is Spread by Rodents And Has Fatality Rate Of 36%

    03/24/2020 9:56:00 AM PDT · by USA Conservative · 45 replies
    Right Journalism ^ | 03.24.2020 | Natalie Dagenhardt
    The emergence of a severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) illustrates that coronaviruses (CoVs) may quiescently emerge from possible animal reservoirs and can cause potentially fatal disease in humans, as previously recognized for animals. In China a virus transmitted from rats re-emerged, it’s not confirmed if this is a new strain of the virus. A man from China’s Yunnan province tested positive for Hantavirus on Monday. He died while on his way back to Shandong Province for work on a chartered bus, China’s state-run Global Times reported. 32 other people have been tested, the report added. Social media is in panic...
  • Rare Rat Virus Infects 2 People In Wisconsin

    01/19/2017 5:00:23 PM PST · by ButThreeLeftsDo · 18 replies
    WCCO.com ^ | 1/19/17 | AP
    MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Health officials are investigating how a rare rat virus called the Seoul virus infected eight people in Wisconsin and Illinois. The Wisconsin Department of Health Services says all eight people had direct contact with rats at Illinois and Wisconsin ratteries, which are rat-breeding facilities.
  • New Mexico reports fourth Hantavirus death (Six cases, four deaths)

    07/01/2016 3:00:26 PM PDT · by CedarDave · 17 replies
    The Albuquerque Journal ^ | June 30, 2016 | ABQJournal News Staff
    Health officials have reported a fourth New Mexico death from Hantavirus this year, making 2016 among the deadliest since the viral illness first appeared here in 1993. A 20-year-old Torrance County woman has died of Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome – the state’s sixth reported case this year, the New Mexico Department of Health announced Thursday. “The messaging is, (Hantavirus) is still here and you still have to take precautions,” said Dr. Paul Ettestad, the department’s public health veterinarian. Hantavirus infection is transmitted by infected rodents through urine, droppings or saliva. People can contract the disease when they breathe in aerosolized virus....
  • Yosemite Workers Tested For Hantavirus, Ordered To Keep Quiet

    09/27/2012 5:05:32 PM PDT · by george76 · 3 replies
    CBS - KTVU-TV Oakland ^ | September 27, 2012
    California public health officials have tested 100 workers at Yosemite National Park to determine whether they were exposed to the deadly mouse-borne hantavirus. Nine people who spent time at the park this year have been infected with the rare virus, the majority after staying at the “Signature” cabins in Curry Village. Three of them died. KTVU-TV Oakland said 100 park workers submitted to voluntary testing on Wednesday and they have been ordered not to discuss the testing.
  • Department of Health Reports Plague Case in Torrance County Man (NM - first case in the US in 2012)

    05/31/2012 4:02:40 PM PDT · by CedarDave · 3 replies
    New Mexico Dept of Health Communications Office ^ | May 31, 2012 | New Mexico Dept of Health
    (Santa Fe) -- The New Mexico Department of Health confirmed today a case of plague in a 78-year-old man from Torrance County who is currently hospitalized in stable condition. This is the first human case of plague in New Mexico this year and in the United States. An environmental investigation will take place at the man’s home to look for ongoing risk to others in the surrounding area. “The Department of Health takes action when a plague case occurs to ensure the safety of the immediate family, neighbors, and health care providers,” said Department of Health Cabinet Secretary, Dr. Catherine...
  • New Mexico boy dies of plague, sister recovering

    06/04/2009 6:38:08 PM PDT · by george76 · 38 replies · 1,295+ views
    Associated Press ^ | June 4, 2009 | SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN,
    An 8-year-old New Mexico boy has died and his 10-year-old sister was hospitalized after both contracted bubonic plague, the first recorded human plague cases in the nation so far this year. Plague is generally transmitted to humans through the bites of infected fleas, but also can be transmitted by direct contact with infected animals, including rodents, rabbits and pets. Symptoms of the bubonic form of the plague in humans include fever, chills, headaches, vomiting, diarrhea and swollen lymph nodes in the groin, armpit or neck areas. Pneumonic plague, which is an infection of the lungs, can include severe cough, difficulty...
  • Plague kills 37-year-old man in Arizona

    10/21/2008 1:43:56 PM PDT · by george76 · 42 replies · 2,000+ views
    Chicago Sun-Times ^ | October 21, 2008
    One day last October, Eric York lugged the carcass of an adult mountain lion from his truck and laid it carefully on a tarp on the floor of his garage. The female mountain lion had a bloody nose, but her hide bore no other signs of trauma. York, a biologist at Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona, found the big cat lying motionless near the canyon’s South Rim. He was determined to learn why she died. Because the park lacks a forensics lab, he did the postmortem in his garage, in a village of about 2,000 park employees. Epidemic experts...
  • Hantavirus season kicks off with 4 cases

    06/05/2008 11:07:43 AM PDT · by george76 · 15 replies · 492+ views
    The Durango Herald ^ | June 5, 2008
    Health department recommends residents take precautions Public-health officials are urging residents to take precautions to avoid hantavirus. Four cases of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome have already been reported in 2008, with one resulting in a fatality. The most recent cases were confirmed last week in Delta and Dolores counties. Two previous cases of hantavirus were reported in Kiowa County in February and Fremont County in early May. The patient in Kiowa County died. "This year's heavy snowpack has provided moisture for ample vegetation that provides food for rodents, and often results in a large jump in both mouse populations and infection...
  • Hantavirus kills Big Horn County man

    04/20/2008 9:53:45 PM PDT · by neverdem · 11 replies · 123+ views
    missoulian.com ^ | April 11, 2008 | NA
    Associated Press HELENA n The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services says a Big Horn County man has died of hantavirus. The agency says it was the first death this year due to hantavirus. The name of the 64-year-old man was not released Friday. He died earlier this week. Montana has had eight reported hantavirus deaths since 1993. The last was in January 2007. In total, the state has had 29 reported infections since 1993. Hantavirus is contracted by inhaling airborne particles from the droppings of deer mice. Symptoms may include fever, vomiting, muscle and body aches and...
  • A Weed, a Fly, a Mouse and a Chain of Unintended Consequences

    04/03/2006 8:16:19 PM PDT · by neverdem · 27 replies · 1,110+ views
    NY Times ^ | April 4, 2006 | JIM ROBBINS
    MISSOULA, Mont. — First came the knapweed. Then came the gall fly. And now the mice population is exploding — the mice that carry hantavirus. In a classic case of unintended ecological consequences, an attempt to control an unwanted plant has exacerbated a human health problem. Spotted knapweed, a European plant, is a tough, spindly scourge that has spread across hills and mountainsides across the West. In Montana alone, one of the worst-hit states, it covers more than four million acres. In the 1970's, biologists imported a native enemy of knapweed, the gall fly. The insect lays eggs inside the...
  • Airman at Fort Bliss died of hantavirus

    02/28/2006 9:13:08 PM PST · by neverdem · 41 replies · 1,388+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | Feb. 28, 2006 | NA
    Associated Press EL PASO — An airman who was training at Fort Bliss for deployment to Iraq died of a deadly virus linked to rodents, an Air Force official said today. Senior Airman Leonard Hankerson Jr., 24, a security forces patrolman, died Feb. 11 at William Beaumont Army Hospital in El Paso. He was assigned to a squadron at Luke Air Force Base in Glendale, Ariz. Autopsy results confirmed last week that Hankerson had hantavirus, said Lt. Col. John Paradis, a Luke Air Force Base spokesman. The disease is transmitted to humans when they inhale particles of dried urine, feces...
  • World sees an explosion in new infectious diseases (And it's all our fault!)

    05/04/2003 11:44:47 AM PDT · by FairOpinion · 17 replies · 362+ views
    Mercury News ^ | May 4, 2003 | SETH BORENSTEIN
    <p>WASHINGTON - Get used to SARS, West Nile, Hantavirus, Ebola, Nipah, Hendra, AIDS and other new nasty infectious diseases. Health experts say we're living in a new age of infections.</p> <p>And we have mostly ourselves to blame.</p> <p>The nation's top scientists say that environmental, economic, social and scientific changes have helped to trigger an unprecedented explosion of more than 35 new infectious diseases that have burst upon the world in the past 30 years. The U.S. death rate from infectious disease, which dropped in the first part of the 20th century and then stabilized, is now double what it was in 1980.</p>
  • BioTerrorism Analysis: Weaponsized Infectious Disease and Emerging Disease

    03/16/2003 7:35:29 PM PST · by bonesmccoy · 107 replies · 3,060+ views
    Various | 3-17-03 | Bones McCoy
    BioTerrorism Analysis: Weaponsized Infectious Disease and Emerging Disease (A Free Republic Technical Analysis) About five weeks ago, I started a technical thread that analyzed the space shuttle disaster which killed an international flight crew and lead to wreckage over the southwestern United States. In that thread, we had a remarkable range of technical and analytical skills which this website brought to bear. Because we are anonymous, we can pursue fact without fear of the liberals killing our careers or worse. Tonight, I seek to create a thread on a more serious national security problem, biological weapons of mass destruction and...