Risk of West Nile Virus low, says official

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Published: September 26, 2013

A man in his 60s has been hospitalized in Saskatchewan’s Five Hills health district, one of seven suspected cases of West Nile Virus in the province.  |  file photo

One serious case confirmed in Sask. Older and immune-compromised people are more vulnerable

Saskatchewan has reported a case of West Nile Virus neurological syndrome even as cooler weather arrived to drive down the risk.

Provincial chief medical health officer Dr. Saqib Shahab said Sept. 20 that a man in his 60s is hospitalized in the Five Hills Health Region, which includes an area around Moose Jaw.

Another six suspected cases of the milder form of the virus are under investigation. Shahab said one other case was confirmed earlier through screening at Canadian Blood Services. That person displayed no symptoms.

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Of the total, two are from the Saskatoon area, two from Regina, three from the Cypress Hills area and the one in Five Hills.

“The risk is still low but not zero,” he told reporters.

People who work in barns or in areas with thick vegetation or a coulee where the frost hasn’t fully hit could still be bitten by the culex tarsalis mosquito, which carries the  virus.

The current cases likely occurred in late August and early September because the disease takes a week or two to develop.

Most infections are characterized by fever, headaches and body aches.

Older and immune-compromised people are more susceptible to the more serious syndrome, but Shahab said even young healthy people can get forms of the virus, which resemble viral meningitis or encephalitis.

Anyone who develops severe headaches, persistent high fever or confusion should seek medical attention.

Alberta has reported 20 cases this year, one of them neurological, while Manitoba has had two. One of those was also neurological.

Shahab said this year’s West Nile hot spot has been in the Dakotas, where high numbers of infection were reported. Saskatchewan held that distinction in 2007, when 1,400 cases and six deaths occurred.

About the author

Karen Briere

Karen Briere

Karen Briere grew up in Canora, Sask. where her family had a grain and cattle operation. She has a degree in journalism from the University of Regina and has spent more than 30 years covering agriculture from the Western Producer’s Regina bureau.

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