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black plague treatment :: Article Creator Black Death Vaccine Being Developed Amid Fears The Disease Could Return And Kill Millions COVID jab scientists are developing a Black Death vaccine over fears the disease could re-emerge and kill millions. Researchers believe their inoculation will be the first approved in the UK for the ancient infection. 1 Covid jab scientists are developing a Black Death vaccineCredit: Getty The Black Death — also known as bubonic plague — has killed 200million people worldwide and medics fear a super-strength version may now appear. The team behind the Oxford AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine said they had made progress on an injection that could prevent bubonic plague developing. A trial of their vaccine on 40 healthy adults, which started in 2021, shows it is safe and can produce an immune response to the often-fatal condition. Prof Sir Andrew Pollard, director of the Oxford Vaccine Group, said the t...

State Health Officials Warn Of Deadly Pond Water Up Your Nose - The Rhino Times of Greensboro - The Rhino TImes

Just about every warning that's come out of the NC Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) in the past year and a half has pertained to the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, on Tuesday, Aug. 17, there was a rare warning for a brain infection that can be linked to swimming in warm ponds in the central part of the state.

On Tuesday, state health officials reported that a child died recently due to an illness caused by an amoeba that's naturally present in freshwater in Guilford County and in other central counties in the state. According to state officials, the young victim swam in a pond on the family's property in central North Carolina earlier this month.

Officials with NCDHHS used the occasion to remind North Carolinians that pond swimming could lead to death.

NCDHHS State Epidemiologist Dr. Zack Moore said the state wanted to send condolences to the family and friends of the child, and added, "Although these infections are very rare, this is an important reminder that this amoeba is present in North Carolina and that there are actions people can take to reduce their risk of infection when swimming in the summer."

Lab tests of the pond water found that the child's illness was caused by "Naegleria fowleri," – an amoeba often found in warm freshwater.

According to state officials, Naegleria fowleri doesn't cause illness if swallowed – but it can be fatal if "forced up the nose."

 State officials warn this type of nostril entry can happen "during jumping into water, diving, water-skiing or other water activities".

Symptoms of the potentially deadly infection — an infection of the brain called "primary amebic meningoencephalitis" –include headaches, fever, nausea, vomiting, a stiff neck, seizures and, eventually, coma.

"These rare infections usually occur when it's hot for prolonged periods of time," health officials stated, "which results in higher water temperatures and lower water levels. Naegleria fowleri grows best at higher temperatures up to 115°F."

Here's what you can do:

  • Limit the amount of water going up your nose when engaging in warm freshwater-related activities.
  • Avoid water-related activities in warm freshwater during periods of high water temperature and low water levels.
  • Avoid digging in, or stirring up, the sediment while taking part in water-related activities in shallow, warm freshwater areas.

Naegleria fowleri infections are extremely rare.  There have only been 147 known infections in the US from 1962 through 2019.

Six of those cases were in North Carolina.

A person can't be infected with Naegleria fowleri by drinking water, and the amoeba isn't found in salt water or in chlorinated pools.

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