In order to participate in the GunBroker Member forums, you must be logged in with your GunBroker.com account. Click the sign-in button at the top right of the forums page to get connected.

Anthrax in Fla.

alledanalledan Member Posts: 19,541
edited October 2001 in General Discussion
By AMANDA RIDDLE LANTANA, Fla. (AP) - Health officials began tracing the steps of a Florida man to pinpoint how he became the first person in the United States in a quarter-century to contract an inhaled form of anthrax, a disease whose profile has been raised since the terrorist attacks.U.S. officials said there was no link to terrorism, but they dispatched investigators to North Carolina and Florida, two states where Bob Stevens has spent time in recent weeks. He was in critical condition Thursday."There's no need for people to fear they are at risk," Dr. Jeffrey P. Koplan, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, said Thursday.Stevens, 63, is known by neighbors in this suburban town south of West Palm Beach for helping others with home repairs, his morning bike rides, and for sharing tomatoes and peppers from his garden. He is an avid outdoorsman. Neighbors said they were worried about where he contracted the disease and whether they also could be at risk of contracting anthrax from the same source."Hopefully it wasn't around here," said Louis Sellitti, 33, a father of four.Anthrax isn't contagious, but can be contracted naturally, often from livestock or soil. It has been developed by some countries as a possible biological weapon.Koplan said a deliberate release of the germ by terrorists is one of several possibilities under investigation. "We have that on the list," he said."We are in a period of heightened risk and concern in this country," he said. "It's our responsibility to make sure people know what is going on and we control it as quickly as possible." Health officials said they were tracing where Stevens had been and what he had done.He traveled to North Carolina on Sept. 27 and left three days later because he wasn't feeling well, said Debbie Crane, spokeswoman for the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Service. He visited Charlotte, Duke University in Durham and Chimney Rock Park where he participated in outdoor activities, Crane said.The CDC has canvassed hospitals and health departments in the two states and found no one else with similar symptoms, Koplan said.He said the patient has no digestive symptoms that would indicate the anthrax came from drinking contaminated water, and no skin symptoms from direct contact with the germ.The most recent previous U.S. case of anthrax was earlier this year in Texas. But that was the more common skin form, not inhalation anthrax, an especially lethal form in which the disease settles in the lungs During the 20th century, only 18 cases of inhaled anthrax were reported in the United States, the most recent in 1976.Stevens was on a ventilator Thursday at JFK Medical Center in Atlantis."We're praying that he pulls through," said Rita Stevens, a daughter-in-law who lives in Tallahassee. "We're devastated."Neighbors said Stevens, a father of four grown children, would mow the lawn of an ill neighbor and repaired flat tires on their children's bikes. His identity was released by his employer, the supermarket tabloid The Sun, where he is photo editor."He helped all the neighbors whenever they needed it," said Mary Crandell. "He's just a really great neighbor. He has been for twenty-some years." Fears that terrorists may have been planning an airborne chemical or biological attack were raised last month when it was learned that a group of Middle Eastern men - including one of the hijackers in the attack on the World Trade Center - had been asking suspicious questions about a crop sprayer at an airfield in Belle Glade, which is about 40 miles inland from Lantana.Those fears prompted the government to ground crop sprayers after the attacks.Anthrax causes pneumonia, and patients are treated with antibiotics. There is also a vaccine to prevent the spread of the disease, but it is available only to the military now.

Comments

  • 218Beekeep218Beekeep Member Posts: 3,033
    edited November -1
    That`s big suger cane county over there,you drive through miles of suger cane and cattle,just like you`d drive though miles of corn,milo,etc.out west.I forget how anthrax is made,does anyone here know?....this is probably,an accident, somehow related to agriculture.
    Will the last reb to leave flarda,please bring the flag?
  • cowdoccowdoc Member Posts: 5,847 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    anthrax can live in soil for yearsit some times shows up in cattle on very dry years when the grass is real short and cattle are eating grass right off the groundor also when there are bad floods that erode the bacteria from in the soil to surface. dont know how this applies to the guy in FLbut this is how cattle can contract anthrax cowdocalso cattle can get blackleg which has nearly identical symptoms as anthrax but i am not sure that humans can contract blackleg [This message has been edited by cowdoc (edited 10-05-2001).]
  • 218Beekeep218Beekeep Member Posts: 3,033
    edited November -1
    Well cowdoc,we`ve had it both ways in the last few months,very dry,but lots of rain lately,3 days of off and on rain.The water has been high,the canals were overflowed into the roads. Lantana is only about 75 miles inland from here,I`m sure they`ve had as much rain or more than we have.
    Will the last reb to leave flarda,please bring the flag?
  • Mom MomMom Mom Member Posts: 169 ✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    cpileri, cpermd, andrew: jump right in here guys, but isn't anthrax treatable with antibiotics? Doesn't the CDC have contingency plans for such calamities as bio-warfare? Why is the general public being allowed to work themselves into a near panic state over something that is treatable? [This message has been edited by Mom Mom (edited 10-06-2001).]
Sign In or Register to comment.