Houston Chronicle

West Nile found in 3 Houston-area ZIPs

Small percentage of mosquito-spread cases prove deadly

- By Todd Ackerman todd.ackerman@chron.com twitter.com/chronmed

In what marks the start of the area’s West Nile season, mosquitoes have tested positive for the virus in three locations in Harris County, public health officials reported this week.

In the past two weeks, mosquito samples carrying the West Nile virus were confirmed in traps in the 77338 ZIP code in the northeast, the 77087 ZIP code in the southeast and the 77026 ZIP code around the Kashmere Gardens area northeast of downtown.

Nighttime spraying has begun in those areas.

The first of the confirmati­ons was made in the 77338 ZIP code May 25, the month West Nile often starts showing up in Harris County mosquito traps. Confirmati­on of mosquitoes infecting people typically follows around July.

There were 15 human cases of West Nile in Houston and Harris County in 2017.

Last week, the Montgomery County Mosquito Abatement team confirmed that two mosquito samples tested positive for the West Nile virus. Spraying started there Wednesday and continued through the weekend.

The West Nile virus first arrived in Texas in 2002. Most people infected have no symptoms, but it causes flu-like symptoms, including fever, headache, vomiting and rash in some people and has proved fatal in a small percentage of cases. A 2012 Baylor College of Medicine study found it also can cause chronic health problems.

To prevent infection, public health officials recommend people wear long-sleeve shirts and wear mosquito repellent containing DEET, eliminate standing water in the yard and ensure window screens are intact.

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