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    NBHC Kingsville hospital corpsman works to minimize disease

    NBHC Kingsville hospital corpsman works to minimize disease

    Photo By Rod Hafemeister | 180711-N-WO852-008 KINGSVILLE, Texas (July 11, 2018) -- Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class...... read more read more

    KINGSVILLE, TX, UNITED STATES

    07.23.2018

    Courtesy Story

    Naval Health Clinic Corpus Christi, Texas

    By Rod Hafemeister for NHCCC public affairs office

    KINGSVILLE, Texas (July 24, 2018) -- It happens every year: South Texas is dry for weeks, then it rains – and then come the mosquitoes.

    “They can lay their eggs in even the smallest amount of water,” said Hospital Corpsman 2nd Class Jessica Wright, a preventive medicine technician at Naval Branch Health Clinic (NBHC) Kingsville. “If it dries out, the eggs wait until it’s wet again then hatch. Mosquitoes live to feed, breed and lay eggs. And carry disease.”

    According to Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service, 85 species of mosquito have been identified in Texas. If there is a disease that can be transmitted by mosquito, there’s a species that can do it somewhere in Texas.

    Texas mosquitoes have been found carrying West Nile, chikungunya, dengue, Zika and malaria. Corpus Christi finds mosquitoes carrying West Nile almost every year.

    Wright, originally from Fayetteville, Arkansas, works to minimize the disease risk. She tracks mosquito populations at Naval Air Station Kingsville (NASK) and recommends control measures, like fogging.

    “So far, including records before I got here two years ago, we haven’t had any trapped mosquitoes test positive for disease,” she said. “We’re still tracking on Zika and West Nile – that’s a big one. Nothing yet and I hope it stays that way.

    “But we have a mobile population that goes all over the world. Or people can get bit on vacation, come back here, get bit and spread that disease.”

    Wright has been in the Navy seven years and a preventive medicine tech for two. The job includes inspections of food service, childcare and recreational facilities, water systems, bacteriological analysis, epidemiological investigations, mass immunization programs and field sanitation as well as disease vector control.

    “It encompasses everything. And I get to go outside,” she said.

    But she has a special passion about mosquitoes.

    “I hate them. I can’t think of any reason for them to exist except to spread disease,” she said.
    Wright’s primary tool for combating mosquitoes is a ‘mosquito magnet,’ a trap that uses propane to emit a carbon dioxide scent that attracts mosquitoes into a mesh bag.

    “I set it up overnight and in the morning extract the mosquitoes, live and dead, package them and ship them overnight to the state lab in Austin,” she said.

    The lab sends back results showing the numbers of mosquitoes by species and if any were carrying a disease.

    So far this year, there have been few mosquitoes, even with the heavy rains.

    Part of that has been the ongoing effort in recent years to reduce the places mosquitoes can lay eggs, such as ensuring there are no abandoned tires or other standing water traps.

    Two old intermittent ponds were filled in several years ago, also reducing places mosquitoes could breed.

    “We go out and pump the water when it could attract mosquitoes,” said Arturo Alvidrez, performance assessment representative with NASK Public Works.

    “We also use insecticide and fogging. I think we have a very effective control program on the base.”

    But another reason mosquito counts are down is the frequent high winds that scatters the insects.

    “If the winds are high, say above 20 mph, you’re not going to catch anything in the traps,” Wright said.

    But Wright’s policy is not to take chances.

    “My attitude is, let’s fog and kill them and not have this risk,” she said. “I’d rather make sure everyone is protected.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.23.2018
    Date Posted: 07.23.2018 15:20
    Story ID: 285368
    Location: KINGSVILLE, TX, US

    Web Views: 165
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN