The Signal

More West Nile Virus activity reported

One additional mosquito tested positive since LA county’s last report

- By Christina Cox Signal Staff Writer

The latest report from the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health shows an increase in West Nile Virus activity across the Santa Clarita Valley.

Since the agency’s last report, one additional mosquito tested positive for the virus in Newhall and another tested positive in Santa Clarita. Two sentinel chickens were also found to have the virus in the Santa Clarita Valley.

Signage from the Greater Los Angeles County Vector Control District (GLACVCD)—which oversees 6.8 million residents in its 1,340-squaremile area—

Signage in Santa Clarita’s Central Park noted that one of these West Nile Virus mosquitoes was found in the area, according to the Greater Los Angeles County Vector Control District (GLACVCD)—which oversees 6.8 million residents in its 1,340-square-mile area.

The report follows a warning shared by the GLACVCD more than two weeks ago about an increase in West Nile Virus across its jurisdicti­on.

So far, a total of 14 dead birds, 12 sentinel chickens and 202 mosquito samples tested positive for West Nile Virus within the Greater Los Angeles County Vector Control District’s area.

For all of 2017, one of the mosquito samples was reported in Castaic, one was reported in Newhall and two were reported in Santa Clarita.

An Aug. 18 report from the Department of Public Health stated that it had confirmed 27 cases of West Nile Virus in Los Angeles County.

The cases impacted individual­s between the ages of 25 and 82 and resulted in 23 hospitaliz­ations and three asymptomat­ic blood donors, according to the department’s

Epidemiolo­gy Report No. 3.

Last year, a total of 153 human infections and five fatalities were reported in Los Angeles County for all of 2016.

“By this time in 2016 there were 45 cases reported due to an unusual early increase. Compared to the previous 5-year average, there has been an increased number of cases in July,” the department’s report read.

The cities of Los Angeles and Glendale have had the greatest number of residents with West Nile Virus, with a total of eight cases and four cases reported respective­ly.

Infections from West Nile virus range from mild to fatal. Infected individual­s can experience cognitive and neurologic­al symptoms, and have a mild fever and body aches that can progress to weakness, confusion and paralysis.

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