X

State officials pledge to step up efforts of combat Eastern Equine Encephalitis

Posted 10/17/11

State officials have pledged to step up their efforts to combat Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE), committing to a comprehensive approach to prevent, detect and respond to outbreaks of the deadly …

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Please log in to continue

Log in

State officials pledge to step up efforts of combat Eastern Equine Encephalitis

Posted

State officials have pledged to step up their efforts to combat Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE), committing to a comprehensive approach to prevent, detect and respond to outbreaks of the deadly virus beginning next summer.

At a roundtable sponsored by Senate Agriculture Committee Chair Patty Ritchie and Health Committee Chair Kemp Hannon, state health, agriculture and environmental officials said they are working on new ways to fight EEE, a mosquito-borne illness that caused the deaths of five Central New York residents, including three in the past three years.

“State health and other officials have pledged to expand their mosquito disease response and control plan for next year with more emphasis on finding and controlling outbreaks of the disease and the mosquitoes that carry it,” Ritchie said. “That’s good news for Central New York, which has been ‘ground zero’ for this disease for the past 40 years, and other counties in the state that have seen recent outbreaks, including St. Lawrence County.”

Officials said they are modeling their efforts, which will include better coordination with all the affected counties, on expanded state programs to control other diseases carried by insects, including West Nile virus.

Ritchie’s Roundtable forum brought together top state and local health experts, environmental experts, and animal health and agriculture experts to discuss how to better control the virus and protect human and animal health. The discussion spanned nearly two hours, and covered topics such as mosquito habitats, methods of personal protection, and government response. The senators were told that the disease struck with a particular vengeance this year, showing up earlier and more widely in pools of standing waters that are routinely tested.

Ritchie urged officials to do more to improve communication with the public, including farmers, whose horses and other livestock are at particular risk from EEE.

Officials said they would review Ritchie’s suggestion to use the state’s NY-ALERT system to issue advisories and health warnings.

After the death of four-year-old Maggie Wilcox of Oswego County, Ritchie wrote to the commissioners of Health, Environmental Conservation, and Agriculture and Markets to ask for a list of detailed steps that the agencies were taking or planning to take to counter the spread of EEE to animals and humans.

Senators Ritchie, Hannon and David Valesky met with the Wilcox family before the forum, which was held at the Oswego City School District headquarters in Oswego.

Among steps that state officials expect to take to control the virus and better protect public and animal health:

- placing more emphasis on control and prevention as well as public education on prevention;

- developing an enhanced testing and surveillance program;

- developing risk communication and prevention programs using both personal protective measures and environmental controls.

Cornell University’s Outreach Veterinarian Dr. Belinda Thompson said the problem may be even more widespread than it appears because most animals infected and killed by EEE are never tested specifically for the disease. But she also pointed out that while the disease may be infecting other animal species, it can only be spread through the bite of certain species of mosquitoes.

Members of the public can view the complete roundtable at www.ritchie.nysenate.gov