
UNHEALTHY IMMIGRANT: Mosquitoes that play host to exotic tropical diseases are expanding north as climate change warms average temperatures.
Image: James Gathany, CDC
Diseases once thought to be rare or exotic in the United States are gaining a presence and getting new attention from medical researchers who are probing how immigration, limited access to care and the impacts of climate change are influencing their spread.
Illnesses like schistosomiasis, Chagas disease and dengue are endemic in warmer, wetter and poorer areas of the world, often closer to the equator. According to the World Health Organization, almost 1 billion people are afflicted with more than one tropical disease.
Caused by bacteria, parasites and viruses, these diseases are spread through bites, excrement and dirty water stemming from substandard housing and sanitation. Consequently, the United States has been largely isolated from them.
But Americans are traveling more, and as tropical vacationers return home, they may unwittingly bring back dangerous souvenirs. Immigrants from endemic regions are also bringing in these diseases, some of which can lie dormant for years. All the while, the flies, ticks and mosquitoes that spread these illnesses are moving north as rising temperatures make new areas more welcoming.
In 2009, dengue emerged in south Florida and infected more than 60 people, the first outbreak since 1934, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Dengue is caused by four closely related viruses spread by mosquitoes. It results in joint and muscle pain, severe headaches and bleeding.
The outbreak was first detected in a Rochester, N.Y., woman who traveled to Key West, Fla., for one week, with several Key West residents subsequently reporting infections. The infection rate rose to 5 percent, which CDC said indicated "a serious risk of transmission."
According to the Monroe County Health Department, there hasn't been a confirmed dengue case in the Florida Keys since November 2010. "We keep the public aware that they need to be dumping standing water and wearing mosquito repellent," explained Chris Tittle, public information officer at the health department. The outbreak may have been linked to travel from Latin America and the Caribbean, where the disease's incidence has risen fourfold over the past 30 years. In 2010, Puerto Rico faced the largest dengue epidemic in its history.
However, not every outbreak is imported, and future epidemics may come from within. "There's a substantial but hidden burden of tropical disease in the United States, particularly among people in poverty," said Peter Hotez, founding dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine, the first such school in the United States, at Baylor College of Medicine in Texas. Diseases like leishmaniasis often are not tracked rigorously in this country and are classified as neglected, unlike vector-borne illnesses like Lyme disease that are monitored.
Little data or public awareness
Since there is a dearth of data, it is hard to distinguish to what extent neglected tropical diseases are actually endemic in the United States or are brought by travelers and immigrants. It is also hard to tell if the number of infections is rising or if people are just noticing them more.
"In most cases, we don't know. We're just really getting our arms around how pervasive the disease is," said Hotez, who is studying these diseases in communities along the Gulf Coast. "People jump to the conclusion that it must be immigration coming up from Mexico or Central America, but we don't think that's the case."
Hotez believes some of these diseases may be spreading indigenously, though other infections do have stronger links to immigration. For example, Chagas disease is a parasitic infection caused by Trypanosoma cruzi, a single-celled parasite. It causes swelling at the infection site and, if left untreated, develops into a chronic illness that can be asymptomatic or unfelt in most people and can cause digestive, heart and nervous system failures in others.



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11 Comments
Add CommentThis is the same Rep. Johnson who was concerned about Guam capsizing?
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisThere is always a good way to find out more information about these diseases...spread them into the rich areas, and then watch how fast they find a cure.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisAnother perfectly good reason to crack down on illegal immigration; since legal immigrants are screened for such diseases.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisI hope that was a troll (a weak one, at that).
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisIt was, but I guess it is hard to argue against facts and the truth.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisTip of the iceberg when it comes to tropical diseases spreading into the US given the lack of preventable health care. A reasoned and reasonable essay on the subject.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisWhen drought occupies most of the tropical area as a result of global warming, with the related death of many of the people there, the vectors of tropical diseases will have to come north to claim their allotted quotient of victims.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisWait! The premise of this article was the UNPROVED THEORY of so called "global warming". Gosh, they had me worried there for a moment, but then reason took over. I'm OK now.
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to this#Gatnos,
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisThat you make statements such as "The premise of this article was the UNPROVED THEORY of so called "global warming" is a testament to your scientific ignorance.
The so-called proof of global warming has been manufactured and falsified evidence. The majority of scientists around the world now hold that what is being called global warming or climate change (to explain the decreasing average temperature for the past 10 years) is nothing more than the normal climatic cycle. Al Gore may have not invented the internet, but he did invent global warming and the Cap and Trade faux economy. Hold onto your wallet and WAKE UP!
Reply | Report Abuse | Link to thisIt could get so bad that it will become necessary to get rid of all standing water and even go so far as pour oil on mosquito breeding swamps. The United States might even need to resurrect the draconian procedures it used in the 1920s to rid the nation of malaria. Of course the EPA did not exist then.
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