2016-04-24 11:43:21 - Biological Hazard - USA | | EDIS Code: | BH-20160424-53039-USA | Date&Time: | 2016-04-24 11:43:21 [UTC] | Continent: | North-America | Country: | USA | State/Prov.: | State of Washington, | Location: | Benton-Franklin Health District, | City: | | Not confirmed information! | | | Description: | Benton-Franklin Health District was notified on Friday, 22 Apr 2016, that a local resident was being tested for a possible case of pneumonic plague. Test results are expected on Saturday [23 Apr 2016] from the Washington State Department of Health. The case has not been confirmed and there is no immediate risk to the general public, the health district said. The health district will continue to investigate the case, as it does with all reportable conditions. Plague occurs naturally in the western United States; the last case in Washington State was in 1984. The plague bacterium (Yersinia pestis) is transmitted by fleas and cycles naturally among wild rodents. Plague can also infect humans and their pets. Plague can be treated successfully with antimicrobials, but an infected person must be treated promptly. Anyone who has been exposed to the illness can be treated with antibiotics before developing symptoms. Plague is most often transmitted through bites of infected fleas. It can also be contracted by touching or skinning infected animals (coyotes, squirrels, rats, prairie dogs, and rabbits) or inhaling droplets from the cough of an infected person or animal (especially sick cats). The last reported human-to-human transmission in the US occurred in the 1920s. | The name of Hazard: Plague (pneumonic) | | | |
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