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Whitcomb and Cohen report: "Some 10,000 people who stayed in tent cabins at Yosemite National Park this summer may be at risk for the deadly rodent-borne hantavirus, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Friday."

Campers roast marshmallows at the Lower Pines camp site in Yosemite National Park. (photo: Peter DaSilva/NYT)
Campers roast marshmallows at the Lower Pines camp site in Yosemite National Park. (photo: Peter DaSilva/NYT)



CDC Says 10,000 at Risk of Hantavirus in Yosemite Outbreak

By Dan Whitcomb, Ronnie Cohen, Reuters

01 September 12

 

ome 10,000 people who stayed in tent cabins at Yosemite National Park this summer may be at risk for the deadly rodent-borne hantavirus, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Friday.

The CDC urged lab testing of patients who exhibit symptoms consistent with the lung disease, hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, after a stay at the California park between June and August and recommended that doctors notify state health departments when it is found.

Two men have died from hantavirus linked to the Yosemite outbreak and four others were sickened but survived, while the CDC said additional suspected cases were being investigated from "multiple health jurisdictions."

Most of the victims were believed to have been infected while staying in one of 91 "Signature" tent-style cabins in Yosemite's popular Curry Village camping area.

"An estimated 10,000 persons stayed in the 'Signature Tent Cabins' from June 10 through August 24, 2012," the CDC said. "People who stayed in the tents between June 10 and August 24 may be at risk of developing HPS in the next six weeks."

Yosemite officials earlier this week shut down all 91 of the insulated tent cabins after finding deer mice, which carry the disease and can burrow through holes the size of pencil erasers, nesting between the double walls.

Park authorities said on Friday that they had contacted approximately 3,000 parties of visitors who stayed in the tent cabins since mid-June, advising them to seek immediate medical attention if they have symptoms of hantavirus.

Nearly 4 million people visit Yosemite, one of the nation's most popular national parks, each year, attracted to the its dramatic scenery and hiking trails. Roughly 70 percent of those visitors congregate in Yosemite Valley, where Curry Village is located.

Yosemite Logs 1,500 Calls

The virus starts out causing flu-like symptoms, including headache, fever, muscle ache, shortness of breath and cough, and can lead to severe breathing difficulties and death.

The incubation period for the virus is typically two to four weeks after exposure, the CDC said, with a range between a few days and six weeks. Just over a third of cases are fatal.

"Providers are reminded to consider the diagnosis of HPS in all persons presenting with clinically compatible illness and to ask about potential rodent exposure or if they had recently visited Yosemite National Park," the CDC said.

Although there is no cure for hantavirus, which has never been known to be transmitted between humans, treatment after early detection through blood tests can save lives.

"Early medical attention and diagnosis of hantavirus are critical," Yosemite superintendent Don Neubacher said in a statement. "We urge anyone who may have been exposed to the infection to see their doctor at the first sign of symptoms and to advise them of the potential of hantavirus."

Yosemite spokeswoman Kari Cobb said rangers have answered some 1,500 phone calls from park visitors and others concerned about the disease. But she said the outbreak had not triggered a wave of cancellations.

"Right now it's normal numbers for Friday," she said. "There have been cancellations, but it would be grossly overstated to say they're cancelling en masse. There's quite a bit of people out there still. It's still summer and a holiday weekend. It's still the summer crowds."

A national park service officials has said that public health officials warned the park twice before about hantavirus after it struck visitors. But it was not until this week that the hiding place for the deer mice carrying the virus was found.

Hantavirus is carried in rodent feces, urine and saliva, which dries out and mixes with dust that can be inhaled by humans, especially in small, confined spaces with poor ventilation.

People can also be infected by eating contaminated food, touching contaminated surfaces or being bitten by infected rodents.

 

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-3 # Glen 2012-09-02 03:51
Getting to the point folks are going to stay at home. Others will continue to travel, even overseas, and consider how easy these diseases, those that are airborne or person to person, will spread. That has been proven repeatedly.

Between infected critters and the close proximity of billions of people, an epidemic is inevitable.
 
 
+6 # tref 2012-09-02 06:22
What part of "never been known to be transmitted between humans" did you not understand? Hanta was first identified in the US in 1993 and since then, there have been no (that is zero, none, nada) reported cases of person-to-perso n transmission of the disease in North America. COULD it happen? It is unwise to say it could never happen but it is wildly irresponsible to suggest that p-t-p transmission is a factor in the spread of this disease or that "an epidemic is inevitable".
 
 
-6 # animas 2012-09-02 05:00
Starhawk reminds us that now is the time of consequences... It's no longer off in the distant future...

William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)
THE SECOND COMING

Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.

Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out
When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: a waste of desert sand;
A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
Wind shadows of the indignant desert birds.

The darkness drops again but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
 
 
+3 # Vermont Grandma 2012-09-02 07:05
The diseases one can pick up from others on an airplane or here in the US in a national park, does give pause.

However, even unusual diseases like Hantavirus turn up in unexpected places. A friend of ours nearly died in 2000, here in Vermont, from mouse droppings and dust disturbed when he was cleaning out an outdoors shed and moving firewood. He did survive, just barely, after the docs finally figured out that he had a disease not imagined to occur here in Vermont.
 

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