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Lyme Disease Is Growing, Spreading To New Areas: CDC Study
Over the last 20 years in the Northeast, the number of counties with a high rate of the disease increased from 43 to 182.

By Marc Torrence and Wendy Ann Mitchell
Incidents of Lyme disease are on the increase, and not in just the usual places. The geographical spread of the disease is widening, according to the Center for Disease Control.
Over the last 20 years in the Northeast, the number of counties with a high rate of the disease increased from 43 to 182, more than 320 percent. That included counties in Connecticut, New York and Massachusetts, among others.
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The reason for this uptick? Climate change, according to an article on Quartz.
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As the climate warms, ticks can survive in more environments, like the ones studied in those frigid north-central states.
Scientists also say that as humans clear forests, popular tick targets - like mice - begin to find other homes, leaving ticks with fewer mammals to latch on to. So they go to another abundant source passing through their area: humans.
“Our results show that geographic expansion of high-risk areas is ongoing, emphasizing the need to identify broadly implementable and effective public health interventions to prevent human Lyme disease,” the CDC report says.
Connecticut is considered a high-risk area, as is nearly all of Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Other states that saw a growth in high-risk cases include New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia.
The CDC states If you observe any of the symptoms below, you should seek immediate medical attention.
- Red, expanding rash called erythema migrans (EM)
- Fatigue, chills, fever, headache, muscle and joint aches, and swollen lymph nodes
- Red rash
- Small bump or redness at the site of a tick bite
The first cases of Lyme disease appeared in children in Old Lyme, Connecticut in 1975. According to National Geographic, an unproven controversial theory is that it was spread from germ warfare experiments at the Plum Island Animal Disease Research Center, on Long Island Sound about eight miles from Old Lyme.
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Photo: Center for Disease Control
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