Public Health Declaration Issued After NY Resident Dies from Untreatable Mosquito-Borne Virus
A person has died from eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) in Ulster County, New York, marking the state’s first EEE death since 2015. This incident has prompted Governor Kathy Hochul to declare an imminent public health threat related to the mosquito-borne virus. The victim is reported to be the second U.S. death from the disease this year, following a death in New Hampshire. As of mid-September, there had been ten cases of EEE reported nationwide. The CDC notes that while only a few cases typically arise each year in the U.S., the disease has no vaccine or treatment, and approximately 30% of infected individuals die. Governor Hochul’s declaration will allocate state resources to assist local health departments in combating the threat posed by EEE.
A person has died in New York state from eastern equine encephalitis, prompting Gov. Kathy Hochul to declare the rare mosquito-borne illness an imminent threat to public health.
The death that was reported Monday in Ulster County is apparently the second death from the disease in the United States this year after a New Hampshire resident infected with the eastern equine encephalitis virus died last month.
Ten human cases of the disease, also known as EEE, had been reported nationwide as of Sept. 17, before the New York case was confirmed, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Ulster County death was the first from the disease in New York state since 2015. No details about the person who became infected and died have been released.
Hochul said the public health declaration will free up state resources to help local health departments combat EEE.
“Following the first confirmed human case of EEE, my administration took statewide action to help protect communities — and with today’s declaration we’re making more state resources available to local departments to support their public health response,” the governor said in a news release.
The CDC says only a few cases of EEE are reported in the U.S. each year, mostly in the eastern and Gulf Coast states. There were just seven cases nationally last year but more than 30 in 2019, a historically bad year.
There are no vaccines or treatments for EEE, and about 30 percent of people who become infected die. Symptoms include fever, headache, vomiting, diarrhea and seizures.
The Western Journal has reviewed this Associated Press story and may have altered it prior to publication to ensure that it meets our editorial standards.
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