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Keeping Your Cool

As hot, hazy and humid conditions persist in the region, the Health Unit urges people to take precautions in the extreme temperatures.

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Lets Target Lyme!

With casese of Lyme disease on the rise in parts of southern Ontario, it's time to "Get Tick Smart!"

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Enjoy Summer Safely

Make the most of your summer vacation, but remember that being safe does not take a holiday -- no matter what time of year.

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Child Car Seats: It's Time For a Change

If your child's car seat is out-of-date, then it needs to be replaced. In Haliburton County, discounts are available on the purchase of new select car seats at local retailers.

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Beach Testing

Planning to visit a local beach this summer? Find out whether it is safe to swim at beaches in Northumberland County, Haliburton County and the City of Kawartha Lakes.

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White Nose Syndrome in Bats

With White Nose Syndrome being detected in bats in Ontario, you are asked to take precautions when coming in contact with bats.

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Simply Safer is Simply Smarter

Considering home renovations? A free Simply Safer is Simply Smarter Kit can help you build safey features into your plans for a home safe home.

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Taste that Hits Home

With the warmer wether here, there is no place like home for enjoying fresh food grown and produced in your own community.

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How Well is Your Well Water?

Free well water testing is available for local residents. Let the local Health Unit help you ensure your drinking water is safe.

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Convictions

Through its inspection work, the Health Unit has obtained convictions against establishments that contravene various pieces of health legislation.

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Hantavirus
(Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome)

What is hantavirus?

It’s a virus that can cause a rare but very serious lung disease called hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS). The virus was first found in people in 1993 but has probably existed for many years.

The first cases were in rural areas of the southwest United States. 

How is hantavirus spread?

Rodents may carry the virus, especially deer mice. Infected rodents shed the virus in their urine, saliva and droppings (feces). Deer mice are pale grey, with white fur on their stomachs.  They live mainly in rural and semi-rural wooded areas.  They are not generally found in urban areas. Health Canada found the virus in two of 43 deer mice collected in Algonquin park in the summer of 1994.

Your chances of getting HPS are very low.  Only rarely do people exposed to the virus become infected. People can be exposed to the virus in several ways:

  • most often by breathing in infected dust from deer mice droppings or urine.
  • being bitten by an infected deer mouse.
  • touching any broken skin after contact with infected material.

The virus does not pass from person to person. It is not spread through food, water, or insects, such as ticks, blackflies and mosquitos. Pets and livestock do not catch the virus so these cannot pass it to people.

Am I at risk?

Most people in Ontario will never be exposed to the hantavirus. People who are in very close contact with deer mice may increase their chances of getting the disease. Spending time where deer mice live may increase the chance of exposure.  These areas include hiking trails, vacant buildings or cottages, barns and fields. 

What are the symptoms of HPS?

HPS starts with fever, chills, headache, and muscle pain.  As the disease gets worse it becomes harder to breathe. If you get these symptoms and shortness of breath within six weeks of exposure to deer mice, see a doctor right away.  Symptoms usually start within two weeks. But they can start as early as three days or as late as six weeks after infection.

How is HPS treated?

Early diagnosis helps in successful treatment of symptoms.  Research for a vaccine is under way.

How can I protect myself from HPS?

The easiest way is to limit your contact with deer mice and their droppings, urine, or saliva. They are attracted to areas where they can find food, water, and shelter.  It’s wise to follow the following tips anywhere there are large numbers of deer mice.

Outdoors:

Always store food, water and garbage in metal or heavy plastic containers with tight-fitting lids.  Do not leave pet food or water out overnight.

Seal holes around doors, windows, and roofs with steel wool or cement.  To discourage digging and nesting, place gravel around the base of the building.

Remove any abandoned vehicles, old tires or cast-off furniture from your property.  Cut back thick bush and keep grass short.  Keep woodpiles, hay and trash cans off the ground and away from your home.

When hiking or camping, use a ground cover or a tent with a floor. Try to avoid areas where there are recent rodent burrows or droppings. It’s always wise to use bottled or disinfected water.

Indoors

Set traps indoors.  Douse dead mise, used traps and nests with household disinfectant or diluted bleach.

Always use rubber or plastic gloves when handling dead rodents and other materials.  Put them inside a plastic bag.  Seal the bag, then put it in a sealed garbage can.  Or bury it. Rinse gloves with disinfectant or diluted bleach before you remove them.  Wash gloves and hands in hot soapy water.

Always wear rubber gloves when cleaning up signs of mice.  Open windows/doors for a half-hour before and after cleaning to air out the area.

Wet floors to minimize dust.  Damp-mop and wash floors with soap, water and disinfectant.  Do not vacuum or sweep bare floors before mopping.

Wear a breathing mask if the area is poorly ventilated.  Wash countertops, drawers, and cupboards with disinfectant. Wash any clothing or bedding contaminated with droppings.  Dry them in the sun or in a hot dryer.

After clean-up, wash hands and face well before eating, drinking or smoking.

Don’t attract mice.  Always clean up spilled food, and wash dishes right away.

For more information, call the Haliburton, Kawartha, Pine Ridge District Health Unit toll-free at 1-866-888-4577.

Adapted from information provided by the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care.

July 14, 2005

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