Hamilton

Hamilton moves threat of West Nile from low to moderate

Here's how to prevent getting the virus.

Here's how to prevent getting the virus

A mosquitoes sits on the skin.
There is a moderate risk of Hamiltonians catching West Nile, public health officials say. (James Gathany/Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/Associated Press)

Hamiltonians are at risk of getting West Nile after a recent batch of mosquitoes tested positive for the virus.

The city's medical officer of health has moved the risk of West Nile virus from low to moderate.

That means residents should remove standing water from their properties and guard against mosquito bites, public health officials said in a media release.

The city has just done a third round of larviciding treatments in catch basins, the release says. It's also treating surface water on public land.

About 80 per cent of people infected with the virus don't have symptoms, it says. But about 20 per cent of people — mostly older adults and those with weakened immune systems — get West Nile fever. About one per cent will experience severe illness, including inflammation of the brain ot its lining. 

Symptoms appear between two days and two weeks after a bite from an infected mosquito.

Here's how to prevent it:

  • Avoid being bitten by mosquitoes.
  • Use a mosquito repellent (bug spray) containing DEET or Icaridin.
  • Avoid areas where you know there are mosquitoes, or cover up by wearing light coloured long sleeves and long pants. Do this when you're in high-mosquito areas such as the woods, a golf course or a garden. Public Health especially recommends doing this at dawn and dusk. That's when mosquitoes are most active.
  • Remove standing water on your property at least once a week. Mosquitoes breed in those areas.

For more info, visit hamilton.ca/westnile