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  1. #1
    Senior Member JohnB2012's Avatar
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    California Woman Hospitalized With Bubonic Plague

    First Confirmed Case In LA In 22 Years

    http://www.nbc17.com/news/8820328/detail.html

    LOS ANGELES -- A woman was hospitalized earlier this month with bubonic plague, the first confirmed human case in Los Angeles County in more than two decades, health officials said Tuesday.

    The woman, who was not identified, was admitted April 13 with a fever, swollen lymph nodes and other symptoms. A blood test confirmed she had contracted the bacterial disease. The woman was placed on antibiotics and is in stable condition, the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services said.

    Bubonic plague is not contagious, but if left untreated it can morph into pneumonic plague, which can be spread from person to person. Bubonic plague is usually transmitted to humans from the bites of fleas infected by dead rodents.

    Health officials suspect the woman was exposed to fleas in her central Los Angeles home, said Dr. Jonathan Fielding, the county's director of public health. The woman's family was also placed on antibiotics as a precaution, but there's no evidence they were infected.

    The case is unusual because it occurred in an urban area, Fielding said. Most bubonic plague outbreaks happen in rural communities.

    Health officials said there was no cause for panic because the disease is not easily transmissible.

    "There's no cause for alarm in the community," Fielding said.

    Health officials went to the woman's home Tuesday to trap squirrels and other wild animals. Blood samples from the animals will be sent to a lab to determine if any are infected.

    An estimated 10 to 20 Americans contract plague each year, mostly in rural communities. About one in seven cases is fatal, according to federal statistics.

    The last human cases of plague in Los Angeles County occurred in 1984 when three people contracted the disease. Two of those cases were travel-related and the third involved a person exposed to a sick animal. All three survived.

    Bubonic plague, also known as the Black Death, killed an estimated 25 million people in Europe between 1346 and 1351. The last major urban outbreak in the U.S. occurred in Los Angeles in 1924-25, when at least 30 people died.

    In California, bubonic plague is prevalent among squirrels in the Angeles National Forest and other parks. Health officials regularly warn campers and hikers to take precaution against the disease by avoiding infected animals.

    The plague is considered a bioterrorism agent and state law requires that doctors report suspected cases to local health departments.

  2. #2
    Senior Member Scubayons's Avatar
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    I was reading a couple of years ago about the Plague. It was talking about Arizona having the highest rate of infected rats. They have a team of about I think it was like 10 people that all they do. Is set traps to catch these infected rats.
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  3. #3
    Senior Member JuniusJnr's Avatar
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    there is a Hopi Indian village in New Mexico that was plagued by the plague not so long ago so I don' t know where they come up with this 22 years figure.
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  4. #4
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    Bubonic Plague is also found amongst prarie dogs in western Nebraska and Kansas and eastern Wyoming and Colorado.

    Every once in awhile we read of a rancher who contracts the disease. A few die.

    In urban areas, we have to fear unsanitary conditions where folks just toss their garbage willy-nilly so rats have a happy home. Also, packing in people like rats, akin to the way some of the illegals live; pacing 20 and more folks into one house, can lead to contagion as the fleas enjoy the bounty of exposed flesh.

    Of course, the elite class appears to want us commoners to live that way.... packed in like the tenaments of old. Hey, if that's the only way we can afford to live as wages stagnate and decline..... as long as the elite's profits are maximized everything is swell.

  5. #5
    Guest
    Bubonic Plague is also found amongst prarie dogs in western Nebraska and Kansas and eastern Wyoming and Colorado.

    Every once in awhile we read of a rancher who contracts the disease. A few die.

    In urban areas, we have to fear unsanitary conditions where folks just toss their garbage willy-nilly so rats have a happy home. Also, packing in people like rats, akin to the way some of the illegals live; pacing 20 and more folks into one house, can lead to contagion as the fleas enjoy the bounty of exposed flesh.

    Of course, the elite class appears to want us commoners to live that way.... packed in like the tenaments of old. Hey, if that's the only way we can afford to live as wages stagnate and decline..... as long as the elite's profits are maximized everything is swell.

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