"If it looks like a , and quacks like a , we have at least to consider the possibility that we have a small aquatic bird of the family anatidae on our hands." - Douglas Adams (English Writer) 1952-2001
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I have not had a banana today
I killed a bunch of Mosquito's today!
slap slap slap slap slap slap slap........when they swarm you as bad as they are doing this season, you lose count after awhile!
Quote from: ozymandias on August 28, 2008, 11:37:08 AMslap slap slap slap slap slap slap........when they swarm you as bad as they are doing this season, you lose count after awhile! Mosquitoes carry West Nile virus here, so we have to be careful. I actually know two people who got very sick from it and some people have died.Mosquitoes just love me, so I need to use repellent.
To be blunt, I look at those figures and those are pretty lite figures in comparison to the total populations of each state. Plus, each case might have had something that made them more vulnerable to West Nile Virus. Either very young or very old or immuno-compromised. The only reason AMber recieved the vaccination was that NY state requires it for kids attending school/camp in THAT state.
Quote from: Callaway on August 28, 2008, 05:29:19 PMQuote from: ozymandias on August 28, 2008, 11:37:08 AMslap slap slap slap slap slap slap........when they swarm you as bad as they are doing this season, you lose count after awhile! Mosquitoes carry West Nile virus here, so we have to be careful. I actually know two people who got very sick from it and some people have died.Mosquitoes just love me, so I need to use repellent.Holy shit! I never knew Colorado was leading the nation.I just googled and found this old news ..."West Nile Virus UpdateWest Nile Virus Update–Nov. 3, 2003By Guangye HuU.S.During 2003, a total of 7,764 human cases of WNV infection has been reported from Colorado (2170), Nebraska (1,540), South Dakota (964), Texas (470), North Dakota (422), Wyoming (320), Montana (218), Pennsylvania (212), New Mexico (196), Iowa (141), Minnesota (137), Ohio (95), Kansas (85), Louisiana (84), Florida (78), Oklahoma (68), New York (67), Mississippi (56), Illinois (48), Maryland (45), Missouri (43), Georgia (36), Alabama (30), Indiana (30), New Jersey (26), North Carolina (23), Arkansas (21), Virginia (21), Tennessee (20), Massachusetts (17), Kentucky (14), Wisconsin (13), Delaware (13), Connecticut (12), Michigan (6), Rhode Island (5), Vermont (3), Arizona (3), District of Columbia (3), New Hampshire (2), California (2), Nevada (2), South Carolina (1), Utah (1), and West Virginia (1)."This is from the CDC:"West Nile Virus Update --- United States, January 1--August 19, 2008This report summarizes 2008 West Nile virus (WNV) surveillance data reported to CDC through ArboNET as of 3 a.m. Mountain Daylight Time, August 19, 2008. A total of 28 states have reported 236 cases of human WNV illness to CDC (Figure, Table). A total of 137 (58%) cases for which such data were available occurred in males; median age of patients was 48 years (range: 10 months--86 years). Dates of illness onset ranged from January 17 to August 14; two cases were fatal." I'd say that reduction is really good news, but I do not know how to track any inconsistency in reporting habits. I fear that reporting the infections has fallen off faster than the number of cases across the population.
You'll never self-actualize the subconscious canopy of stardust with that attitude.