West Nile Cases, Deaths Keep Breaking Records In Maricopa County
News
Phoenix AZ
17 December, 2021
4:50 PM
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PHOENIX, AZ — Maricopa County continues to break records for the number of West Nile virus cases and deaths recorded this year. As of Friday, 1,300 cases had been recorded in the county, along with 90 deaths. That's compared to three cases and only one death in 2020, according to Maricopa County Department of Public Health records. Since around a month ago, on Nov. 19, the county has seen an additional 247 recorded cases of West Nile virus and 78 additional deaths, according to health department data. With a particularly wet summer this year that followed an extraordinarily dry summer in 2020, conditions were perfect this year for West Nile virus to spread in Maricopa County. Warmer-than-usual temperatures that extended through November and into early December kept the mosquito season going in the Valley when colder weather might have stopped it. West Nile virus was first detected in Arizona in 2003, according to the Arizona Department of Public Health. People contract the disease when an infected mosquito bites them. West Nile is not transmitted through human-to-human contact. Around 80 percent of people bitten by infected mosquitos never develop symptoms or even know they've infected. Slightly fewer than 20 percent might develop a flu-like illness, said Maricopa County Health Department Epizoologist, Melissa Kretschmer. Slightly fewer than 1 percent might develop a more severe illness that affects their brain and spinal cord. Previous annual West Nile virus human case counts, according to Maricopa County Department of Public Health records: 2011: 50 cases and two deaths2012: 98 cases and four deaths 2013: 52 cases six deaths2014: 93 cases and 12 deaths2015: 62 cases and two deaths2016: 63 cases and five deaths2017: 93 cases and six deaths2018: 24 cases and six deaths2019: 155 cases and 17 deaths2020: Three cases and one death
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