I know you will find it hard to believe, but homelessness
seems to be an excellent breeding ground for contagious infectious disease. One does not
have statistics from the homeless encampments in Los Angeles and San Francisco,
but the news from Seattle should concern everyone.
The Seattle Times has the news (via American Digest):
King
County public health officials are becoming increasingly concerned about a
variety of outbreaks of serious infectious diseases among people who are
homeless.
Seattle-King
County Public Health is investigating outbreaks of Group A Streptococcus, shigella, and a rare group of infections transmitted by body
lice among people who are homeless, as well as monitoring a potential
outbreak of hepatitis A, a potentially fatal disease that spread in San Diego.
“The
fact that we’re seeing multiple, different infections now increasing in the
homeless population is an indicator of the sheer increase in the number of
homeless people (in King County) and the fact that they’re in crowded
conditions with poor hygiene and sanitation,” said Dr. Jeff Duchin, health officer for Public Health — Seattle
& King County.
And also,
At a
King County Board of Health meeting Thursday, Dr. John Lynch, medical director
of infection prevention and control at Harborview Medical Center, said at least
two people have died since January when group A strep, which can be spread
through open wounds, become necrotizing fasciitis, more commonly known as
flesh-eating bacteria.
It is
unclear if those cases were among people who are homeless; case reviews are
ongoing. But strep A cases at Harborview nearly doubled between 2016 and 2017,
to 219 cases last year, and “almost all are happening among homeless people,”
Lynch said.
“It’s incredibly concerning. We’re seeing it
on the front lines at Harborview,” said Lynch.
Incredibly concerning, you bet!
Fear not. The home of Amazon, Microsoft and Starbucks is mobilizing to
attack the problem. Its board of health is going to be giving away free hand-washing kits:
The
county board of health passed a resolution Thursday urging more sanitation
and hygiene services for unsheltered homeless people. At the meeting, Seattle
officials described their efforts to increase toilets, hot water and
hand-washing stations at the city’s six sanctioned encampments, and to bring
hand-washing kits to the city’s many unsanctioned camps.
But
Seattle City Councilmember Sally Bagshaw urged more such services. “This is
what happens to people if you don’t have places where you can wash, get cleaned
up,” she said.
There, that will do it.
2 comments:
I wonder if there will come a point that we will reach where we will have to quarantine large sections of the west coast as a hazard to world health? The Left is so locked into certain ideologies that they will lack the wherewithal to contain an ever growing health hazard.
Seattle gonna hafta WORK at catching up to Portland's "Keep Portland Weird" vibe.
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