Dayton Daily News

CDC: Diseases spread by insects are booming

Health experts discuss why bugs are making us sick more often.

- By Bo Emerson

Diseases caused by insects are booming.

In May, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that illness spread by ticks, mosquitoes and fleas had tripled since 2004.

Between 2004 and 2016, there were more than 640,000 reported cases of insect-borne diseases, according to the agency, and the numbers are growing.

So why are insects making us sick more often?

Dr. Lyle Petersen, director of the CDC’s Division of Vector-Borne Diseases, explained the separate trends that are combining to promote the spread of these illnesses.

The first of these trends is the expansion of global trade and global travel.

In the 1950s, said Petersen, each year about 50 million people crossed an internatio­nal border. Today more than a billion cross an internatio­nal border every year.

Crossing with them are new diseases that are then propagated in new territorie­s. “We’ve increased internatio­nal travel by 20 times, so it’s no surprise that we’re seeing this onslaught of imported mosquito-borne diseases,” said Petersen. Among the new mosquito-borne diseases that have entered the U.S. are West Nile, which arrived in 1999, chikunguny­a (from 2014) and Zika (from 2015).

One of the most significan­t of these is still the West Nile virus. Each year, between 700 and 3,000 Americans who contract the virus develop severe neurologic­al symptoms. “Most of those people do not recover fully, and about 10 percent will die,” said Petersen.

“It doesn’t make the news so much — people have gotten used to it,” he said, “but it’s still a very deadly disease and the fact is, you could die from one mosquito bite. So it’s still important to take precaution­s.”

Far more widespread than the neurologic­al disease is a milder version called West Nile fever, which affects 30 to 50 times as many people as its neurologic­al cousin. These victims do not suffer paralysis or meningitis or encephalit­is, but they will develop a body-wracking fever that lasts for weeks.

“While it won’t kill you, it will definitely ruin your summer,” said Petersen, “and I know that from personal experience.”

Petersen lives in Fort Collins, Colo., and he was one of the first people in that town infected by the disease. “It took me about three months to fully recover,” he said. The experience, during the summer of 2003, was unpleasant in the extreme. “It was the last time I ever called West Nile fever a mild disease.”

Another trend is pushing up the incidence of tick-borne disease. Deer ticks are moving into new territory due in part to warming temperatur­es, an expansion that is steadily raising the incidence of Lyme disease.

Petersen said up to 350,000 a year contract Lyme disease. “It doesn’t kill many people, but if left untreated, they can develop heart problems, they can develop neurologic­al problems, they can develop severe arthritis.”

Another trend is making the

matter worse: Fewer predators and bigger suburban forests have led to a boom in the deer population. “There are more deer, and more deer ticks, and the diseases they spread.”

Could we solve this problem by eliminatin­g the deer, or by reducing their numbers drasticall­y? Deer lovers might not approve. “A lot of people like the deer,” said Petersen, “so it’s a very controvers­ial subject.”

There are also tickborne diseases that many haven’t heard of, but can wreak havoc. One of these is ehrlichios­is, which can lead to fever and multi-organ failure. Caused by the bite of a lone star tick, the disease can progress rapidly. “Within a matter of days, it can go from mild to severe illness and even death,” said Petersen. “Left untreated, it gets severe very fast.”

Dealing with these diseases is complex. There are 1,900 separate “vector control” organizati­ons, including public health department­s, mosquito-control districts and other local agencies.

Coordinati­ng the efforts of all these groups is difficult, said Petersen. Control organizati­ons need to do better surveillan­ce of mosquito and tick population­s and collect better data on the effectiven­ess of insecticid­es. Backyard fogging companies may have success in preventing nuisance mosquitoes, but there’s no data on whether they are actually reducing disease, he said. They also may be aggravatin­g our problems by producing more mosquitoes that are resistant to insecticid­e.

In the meantime, said Petersen, we can all help prevent disease by using insect repellent, wearing long sleeves and long pants, using clothes and gear (like backpacks and tents) impregnate­d with permethrin, and keeping ticks off our household pets.

And, taking a page from Brad Paisley, Petersen also recommends checking for ticks as soon as you come inside. To develop Lyme disease, for example, requires a few days’ contact with a tick. If you get it off quickly, it won’t have time to infect you, said Petersen.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/COX NEWSPAPERS ?? A mosquito specialist sprays for mosquitoes at a Georgia residence in 2012. Warming temperatur­es and global travel have contribute­d to a rise in vector-borne illnesses.
HYOSUB SHIN/COX NEWSPAPERS A mosquito specialist sprays for mosquitoes at a Georgia residence in 2012. Warming temperatur­es and global travel have contribute­d to a rise in vector-borne illnesses.
 ?? CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION, DREAMSTIME ?? The number of people who get diseases transmitte­d by mosquito (left), tick (right) and flea bites has more than tripled since 2004.
CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION, DREAMSTIME The number of people who get diseases transmitte­d by mosquito (left), tick (right) and flea bites has more than tripled since 2004.

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