diseases
(a variety of diseases)
Diseases once thought to be rare or exotic in the United States are now gaining a presence and they are getting new attention from medical researchers who are trying to determine how immigration, limited access to medical care, and the impacts of climate change are influencing their spread.
More Americans are traveling, and as tropical vacationers return home, they may unknowingly bring back dangerous souvenirs. Immigrants from endemic regions are also bringing in these diseases, some of which can lie dormant for years. Meantime, the flies, ticks and mosquitoes that spread these illnesses are moving north as rising temperatures make new areas more acceptable to them.
"These insects become infected after biting an animal or a human who already has Chagas disease."
Infection is spread to humans when an infected bug deposits feces on a person's skin, usually while he or she is sleeping at night. The person often accidently rubs the feces into the bite wound, an open cut, the eyes, or mouth."
"Infected mothers can pass the infection to their baby during pregnancy, at delivery, or while breastfeeding."
"Chagas disease 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 other people."
"Chikungunya fever is characterized by sudden onset, chills and fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, arthralgia, and rash."
"The disease is spread by mosquitoes, particularly the Asian tiger mosquito, an invasive species that is expanding from the southeastern United States and may reach as far north as New York."
"The danger of Chikungunya virus being introduced into the Americas is becoming increasingly a realty."