Connecticut residents are being warned that the risk of mosquito-borne diseases, including eastern equine encephalitis, or EEE and West Nile virus is a concern, according to the Department of ...
Each year, the risk levels across the state vary. This year, West Nile virus and EEE risk levels are high in many areas around Massachusetts. The viruses can cause health issues that can become ...
The eastern equine encephalitis virus, or EEE, has put residents in the Northeast on alert after news of a death in New Hampshire and cases in three other states. On average, about 11 human cases ...
The first case of Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) this season has been detected in a horse in Connecticut, officials announced. The State of Connecticut Mosquito Management Program announced in a ...
A person in New Hampshire has died after contracting the eastern equine encephalitis virus. EEE is a rare disease transmitted by mosquitoes; only 11 human cases are reported annually on average ...
A fourth person in Massachusetts has been diagnosed with EEE. Health officials said the person is a man in his 50s from Middlesex County. Several communities are considered at high risk for ...
The EEE virus, which infects birds and is then spread by mosquitos, was first discovered in humans nearly a century ago in Massachusetts. It’s most often been found in and around Plymouth and Bristol ...
Eastern equine encephalitis, also known as EEE or triple E, is a rare mosquito-borne viral disease that has killed one person and infected at least five others in the United States this year.
It was the first horse case of EEE of the season, according to the Department of Agriculture. It said the 23-year-old unvaccinated gelded horse was in Fairfield County. The animal exhibited ...
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health announced a fourth human case of Eastern equine encephalitis (EEE) in the state this year. Officials said the case is a man in his 50s who was exposed ...
"This year’s EEE season has been particularly active and is generating a lot of concern in communities across Massachusetts," Public Health Commissioner Dr. Robbie Goldstein said. Link ...