The National - News

‘Wear a mask’: dangers lurk even after US floods recede

- STACIE OVERTON JOHNSON

Jody Oggs LaFleur has an urgent message for people returning to clean up their homes after the floods caused by Hurricane Harvey – wear a mask.

Her warning was posted on social media as soon as Harvey hit south-east Texas last week, and her story of how a little-known danger nearly killed her has been shared 35,000 times since.

Ms LaFleur went to her mother’s home a month after it was flooded during Hurricane Rita in 2005, to see what she could salvage. She was inside for only a few hours.

Two years later, she was diagnosed with invasive pulmonary aspergillo­sis, a fungal infection caused by invisible spores that can enter any opening in the body including cavities in teeth.

Ms LaFleur had no idea that the fungus was lurking inside her mother’s home, and when she finally got her diagnosis from an infectious disease specialist she was so close to death that she was put on a lung transplant list.

She failed to respond to weeks of intravenou­s anti-fungal medication or a subsequent six months of chemothera­py to kill the fungus living inside her body.

More than 10 years after being infected, the 48-year-old mother of three hopes her story will make Texans pay heed to the risk.

But the fungi and moulds that thrive in damp conditions are not the only dangers that follow a storm of this magnitude. It is in the water that remains that people need to be on the lookout for threats, ranging from alligators to electrocut­ion.

“When these big floods happen, these alligators get flushed out of their normal habitats,” said Dr Harvey Finkelstei­n, chief of emergency medicine at Houston Methodist Hospital.

“In past floods, we’ve had 6 and 7-foot alligators cruising around. Alligators live in the bayous and those bayous have overflowed into neighbourh­oods. It’s a real threat.”

Even people who are well aware of such dangers can be caught off guard. One of Dr Finkelstei­n’s colleagues was bitten by a snake when he stepped on to his porch to survey the damage from Harvey.

Other threats are still to come, such as mosquitoes. During a hurricane, “mosquitoes get washed out with wind and high water and people get lulled into thinking the mosquitoes aren’t that bad”, said Dr Finkelstei­n.

But within a week or two, the larvae reappear with a vengeance in all the extra breeding area provided by stagnant floodwater.

There can be an increase in cases of the mosquito-borne West Nile virus, as seen after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and Dr Finkelstei­n said the Zika virus posed a threat.

“You’ve got these winds that may have brought mosquitoes up from the Caribbean and Latin America, where Zika is much more prevalent, and then deposited them here.”

Then there is the risk of electrocut­ion while walking through flooded areas, said Rick Kosecki, owner of Lake Houston Electrical Services.

On Tuesday, Andrew Pasek, 25, stepped on a live wire as he waded through water to rescue a cat from his sister’s house. He did not survive.

Even in homes that are now dry, the risk of electrocut­ion re-

mains as people start clearing up damage, Mr Kosecki said.

“When they start ripping out sheet rock and walls, they can get into the wires and possibly get shocked or cause damage to the electrical wiring,” he said.

He said it was imperative for people to turn the main circuit breaker off before they re-enter their homes, and to have their wiring inspected by a reputable electricia­n before they start making repairs. But there are simply not enough electricia­ns to handle all the work.

Eight million Texans live in areas affected by Harvey – just 1.4 million fewer than the population of the UAE. About 9,000 people are sheltering in the Houston convention centre and up to 7,000 more in the stadium of the city’s American football team.

These shelters also help the many people who forgot to take their medication with them when they fled the flooding. Doctors at the mobile medical units in the shelters write them 30-day prescripti­ons on the spot, which are then filled at makeshift pharmacies at the shelter.

“These doctors are working 24, 36 hours straight,” says Dr Finkelstei­n. “It’s been quite an amazing experience.”

Still battling the disease she contracted at her mother’s flooded home, Ms LaFleur has been on an experiment­al drug protocol for the past five years. Last year, she also went through 16 rounds of radiation. Nothing has eradicated the fungus from her body.

“My life is totally different now,” she said. “I don’t know my prognosis. I’m really fortunate to be alive but it’s truly a struggle every day.”

With so many threats facing the people going back to their flooded homes, she hopes her advice – to wear a mask– will protect them against at least one.

Dr Finkelstei­n agrees: “Probably the single most protective piece of equipment, if you could have just one, would be an N95 mask. That’s your best protection.”

They cost about Dh55 and are available at home improvemen­t stores.

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 ?? AFP ?? A pickup truck overturned by the floods in Port Arthur, Texas yesterday. Millions are affected by Hurricane Harvey
AFP A pickup truck overturned by the floods in Port Arthur, Texas yesterday. Millions are affected by Hurricane Harvey

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