The Norwalk Hour

Mosquitoes flying free as health department­s focus on virus

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Bug spray, swollen welts, citronella. It’s mosquito season.

And in a normal year, the health department serving Ohio’s Delaware County would be setting out more than 90 mosquito traps a week — tubs of stagnant water with nets designed to ensnare the little buggers.

But this year, because of COVID-19, the mosquitoes will fly free.

Staffers haven’t set a single trap this year, according to Dustin Kent, the program manager of the residentia­l services unit. Even if they had the time, the state lab that typically would test the insects for viruses that infect humans, such as West Nile, isn’t able to take the samples because it’s too busy with COVID-19.

“It’s frustratin­g knowing that we can do a more preventati­ve approach,” Kent said. “But we’re stuck reacting.”

In Washtenaw County, Michigan, mosquito samples aren’t being collected because the health department couldn’t hire the summer interns who typically perform the work. In COVID-19 hot spot Houston, Texas, a third of mosquito control staffers are working the COVID call center and preparing coronaviru­s testing materials. And across Florida, public health officials couldn’t test chicken blood for exposure to mosquito-borne viruses — chickens get bitten by the insects, too, so they can serve as a warning sign — at the overwhelme­d state lab until mid-June, a task that typically begins in the spring.

Monitoring and killing mosquitoes is a key public health task used to curb the spread of deadly disease. In recent years, top mosquito-borne illnesses have killed some 200 people annually in the U.S. But that relatively low toll is due in part to the efforts of public health department­s to keep the spread at bay, unlike in other countries where hundreds of thousands are sickened and die each year.

“Mosquitoes are the biggest nuisance and pest on this planet. Hands down,” said Ary Faraji, the president of the American Mosquito Control Associatio­n, which supports public agencies dedicated to mosquito control. “They are responsibl­e for more deaths than any other organism on this planet, including humans.”

Around the U.S., more than half of public health department­s combat mosquitoes. The goal is to find infected mosquito population­s and kill them before they get to humans, or at least warn the community about their presence. Mosquito-borne epidemics are happening more frequently nationally as temperatur­es rise.

But a joint investigat­ion published this month by KHN and The Associated Press detailed how state and local public health department­s across the

U.S. have been starved for decades, leaving them underfunde­d and without adequate resources to confront the coronaviru­s pandemic, let alone perform mosquito control at the same time. Over 38,000 public health worker jobs have been lost since 2008. Per capita spending on local health department­s has been cut by 18% since 2010.

The short staffing is leaving many localities — especially smaller department­s or those without separate, dedicated control districts — flying blind on potential mosquito threats.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has stepped in to help and is now running mosquito testing for at least nine states, including Florida, Arizona and the Carolinas, said Roxanne Connelly, entomology and ecology team leader for the CDC’s National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases. It is also evaluating human blood samples for mosquito-borne disease for 40 states. Concerned about the disruption­s, the CDC issued a policy brief with the Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Thursday, stressing that mosquito prevention and spraying of insecticid­es was an essential service that needs to continue even in a national health emergency.

Fourteen people in the Florida Keys have come down with dengue, which can cause fever, severe body aches and vomiting. Massachuse­tts has found its first mosquito carrying Eastern Equine Encephalit­is, which kills approximat­ely a third of people infected, according to the CDC. West Nile virus has been found in mosquitoes, birds and other species in at least 18 states and has infected people in nine.

 ?? Rick Bowmer / Associated Press ?? In this Aug. 26, 2019, file photo, Salt Lake City Mosquito Abatement District biologist Nadja Reissen examines a mosquito in Salt Lake City.
Rick Bowmer / Associated Press In this Aug. 26, 2019, file photo, Salt Lake City Mosquito Abatement District biologist Nadja Reissen examines a mosquito in Salt Lake City.

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