Horrific, Mosquito-Borne Virus Invades U.S. for the First Time
http://www.alternet.org/personal-health/horrific-mosquito-borne-virus-invades-us-first-time
A combination of factors, including climate change, could soon make chikungunya a household name.
Horrific, Mosquito-Borne Virus Invades U.S. for the First Time
By Lindsay Abrams
July 5, 2014 | Heard of chikungunya? Up until a year ago , you may not have had reason to, as the mosquito-borne virus was confined to Asia and Africa. But the disease is now making its way to the U.S., and with the right combination of factors could soon become a household name.
Transmitted by mosquito bites, chikungunya usually isnt fatal, according to the CDC, but symptoms, which include joint pain, can be severe and disabling and can last for months. The name chikungunya, in fact, comes from a Makonde word meaning that which bends up, because patients often are stooped in pain while suffering from the disease. Theres no vaccine or treatment, and people in the Americas, not having been exposed to it before, have not developed any resistance to it.
Chikungunya first showed up in the Western Hemisphere last year, with cases reported in the St. Martin. Since then, its sickened over a quarter million people in the Caribbean. And so far, travelers in the region have brought 112 cases back to 27 U.S. states. Each time that happens, the CDC warns, the virus gets the opportunity to gain a foothold and to start spreading locally.
Right now, we are worried about chikungunya in the U.S., Roger Nasci of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told NPR. In fact, we expect that over the course of the next months or years as this virus spreads through the American tropics, and we see more travelers coming into the U.S we will see local transmission.