The Healthiest Home Improvement Products

The Healthiest Home Improvement Products

Making major changes to your home can be hazardous...
The Effects of Climate Change on Your Health

The Effects of Climate Change on Your Health

An important question: What consistently progressi...
Plasma Donation: What You Need to Know

Plasma Donation: What You Need to Know

Do you want to give the gift of life? When it...
How to Get the Most Out of Your Dermatology Appointment

How to Get the Most Out of Your Dermatology Appointment

Got a suspicious-looking mole? How about adult-ons...
Adult Coloring Books-The Story Behind the Therapeutic Trend

Adult Coloring Books-The Story Behind the Therapeutic Trend

Are you a child at heart? If so, you’re definitely...
4 Types of Headaches and How to Treat Them

4 Types of Headaches and How to Treat Them

What illness causes nearly $36 billion in lost pro...
5 Ways to Transform Yourself into a Morning Person

5 Ways to Transform Yourself into a Morning Person

Are you a morning person or a night owl?If you’re...
4 Things Your Body Language Says -- About You and Others

4 Things Your Body Language Says -- About You and Others

We often think about how words impact our lives. B...
8 Ways Caffeine Does You Right

8 Ways Caffeine Does You Right

Are you a caffeinated coffee lover? How about a Mo...
How Ultrasounds May Benefit Breast Cancer

How Ultrasounds May Benefit Breast Cancer

It saved Dr. Nancy Cappello’s life. And it could s...
4 Ways to Keep Your Hands and Nails Youthful

4 Ways to Keep Your Hands and Nails Youthful

Have you ever met a woman who has a face that look...
5 Ways to Combat the Dreaded Double Chin

5 Ways to Combat the Dreaded Double Chin

You think it’s going to be the perfect selfie. Tha...
8 Benefits of Gardening on Your Health

8 Benefits of Gardening on Your Health

Believe it or not, having a green thumb can actual...
6 Ways to Improve Your Posture

6 Ways to Improve Your Posture

“Stand up straight.” Mother may not have known abs...
Lucky 7: Health Numbers You Should Know

Lucky 7: Health Numbers You Should Know

Do you know your “Lucky Seven?” You should if you...
7 Unconventional Relaxation Trends Worth Giving a Try

7 Unconventional Relaxation Trends Worth Giving a Try

Are you tired of conventional relaxation treatment...
What Puts You at Risk for TSS?

What Puts You at Risk for TSS?

We’re about to go back in time for a minute. Do yo...
7 Not-So-Strange Skin Conditions

7 Not-So-Strange Skin Conditions

As we get older, we notice rashes, bumps and spots...
Skin Tags? Here’s What to Do

Skin Tags? Here’s What to Do

Are you struggling with unsightly skin tags?Let’s...
Super Lice? Here’s How to Avoid and Treat Lice

Super Lice? Here’s How to Avoid and Treat Lice

Your child comes home from school scratching his h...
6 Ways to Have a Healthy Kitchen

6 Ways to Have a Healthy Kitchen

The statistics are shocking. One out of every six...
Pros and Cons of Pet Health Insurance

Pros and Cons of Pet Health Insurance

Most people invest in insurance for their health,...
How to Avoid the Middle-Aged Spread

How to Avoid the Middle-Aged Spread

Are you worried about packing on the pounds as the...
Mad Cow Disease-Still a Threat?

Mad Cow Disease-Still a Threat?

People around the world were shocked when a 37-yea...
Could You Save a Life? The Truth About Bone Marrow Donation

Could You Save a Life? The Truth About Bone Marrow Donation

Did you know that a bone marrow transplant can sav...
Work Out For a Cause: 6 Great Charity Choices

Work Out For a Cause: 6 Great Charity Choices

Need a little motivation to get into that dreaded...
All-Natural Cleaning Products You Should Use – and Ones to Skip

All-Natural Cleaning Products You Should Use – and Ones to Skip

Are you going green?According to The Nature Conser...
5 Tips to Make the Most of Your Annual Doctor Visit

5 Tips to Make the Most of Your Annual Doctor Visit

Is it time for your annual physical?When it comes...
Helpful Ways to Discuss Body Image with Kids

Helpful Ways to Discuss Body Image with Kids

Picture this. Your 10-year-old daughter comes home...
6 Ways to Undo Carcinogen Exposure

6 Ways to Undo Carcinogen Exposure

According to the American Cancer Society, carcinog...

A Vacation from the Ordinary: Tropical Diseases in America

April 18, 2024
They sound exotic, limited to far-off lands that you may not even be able to pinpoint without a map. Zika…chikungunya…dengue…leishmaniasis…occasionally we hear about these afflictions in the news, but they're nothing to worry about if you live in the U.S., right?

Even if you've never ventured outside the continental United States, you'll find “tropical” diseases are here, and they've made a home. The danger and risk of contracting a tropical disease is real and can be serious.

It's not a new problem in the U.S., particularly the humid, mosquito-ridden Southeast and Southwest. Epidemics of yellow fever, dengue and malaria have occurred, frequently, even into the mid-20th century. In fact, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, based in Atlanta, was formed in 1946 specifically to combat malaria.

And instead of tropical diseases originating in another country, many are contracted from good, old American mosquitoes and other parasites. It's so widespread in the South that clinics devoted to infectious diseases cater specifically to them. Infectious disease physician Peter Hotez formed such a clinic in Houston at the Baylor College of Medicine.

"While we were calling them neglected tropical diseases, the 'tropical' part is probably a misnomer," Hotez told CNN. "Most of the world's neglected tropical diseases are in wealthy countries. It's the poor living among the wealthy."

High rates of poverty, immigrants and humidity make the South a hotbed for tropical diseases.

Tropical Diseases: The Culprits

The types of pathogens more associated with “tropical” diseases are parasites – it so happens these are fairly common in the United States. The mosquitoes that carry dengue fever, chikungunya, malaria and yellow fever are prevalent in the United States.

Internationally, malaria is likely the most notorious “tropical” ailment, one that has been considered “foreign” to Americans. There are a set of four parasites that carry the disease, which is then transmitted by female mosquitoes. Symptoms include high fever, shaking chills and severe flulike symptoms, and the World Health Organization estimates nearly 200 million cases worldwide occur annually, with about 1,500 diagnosed in the United States. Worldwide, approximately half a million people who contract malaria annually will die.

Mosquitoes carry flaviviruses, which cause dengue fever and several other tropical diseases. Dengue causes flu-like symptoms and severe pain in the areas of the head, eyes, muscles and joints. Nearly 400 million cases occur worldwide, according to the CDC, but there are usually less than 100 cases found annually in the United States. The most recent outbreak has been ongoing in Hawaii for nearly six months. The island state has experienced 242 confirmed cases of dengue fever with no reported fatalities.

A flavivirus is also to blame for the headline-making Zika virus, which has been prominent in the news as it spreads in South and Central America. Particularly in Brazil, women of childbearing age have been advised to put off conception until the epidemic subsides. For those who have healthy immune systems, Zika causes mild fever, rash, conjunctivitis (pink eye) and muscle pain – or no symptoms at all. But in November 2015, the Ministry of Health in Brazil found a link in the uptick of babies born with microencephaly to Zika virus infections. Microencephaly is a serious condition in which infants exhibit a smaller-than-normal head circumference, which may accompany developmental delays and other serious complications. Experts recommend the same avoidance strategies for pregnant women in affected areas as anyone else trying to ward off mosquitoes.

Chikungunya is a difficult word to say and a disease that's even more difficult to endure. Much like dengue, chikungunya causes debilitating pain. Its name, which means "that which bends up," gives an idea of its effect on the joints. Since mid-2014, 497 travel-related cases have been found in the United States, primarily in the Southeast.

Tropical Disease Prevention

Much like the other mosquito-transmitted diseases, the best way to prevent chikungunya is to make the environment inhospitable to mosquitoes by eliminating sources of standing water and areas where water can collect, such as birdbaths, spare tires and kiddie pools. These areas are where mosquitoes like to lay their eggs. Spending time outdoors requires applying a DEET-based insecticide and wearing long pants and sleeves.

Socioeconomic conditions that give rise to these diseases seem to be those of neglect – inadequate drainage and waste management, where mosquitoes and other vectors (vector refers to an organism that carries an infectious pathogen) collect and proliferate. In many pockets of the southern United States, the heat and humidity, a crumbling infrastructure and concomitant problems – overcrowding, cross-contamination and stray animals – make a rampant recipe for disease.

An estimated 45 million Americans live in poverty, including more than one in five children. Approximately 1.65 million live in extreme poverty, defined as living on less than $2 per day, according to a study conducted by the National Poverty Center.

Clearly, early health care maintenance affects lifelong ability to ward off disease. Once they do invade, pathogens can remain dormant, stored in recesses of the body. Prevalent conditions such as diabetes, malnutrition, stress, cardiovascular disease and more can lower the body's resistance to those pathogens. Couple that with a lack of preventive measures to eradicate mosquitoes, and it's the perfect storm for once-tropical diseases to invade the borders. Poverty is our neighbor. Poverty is pernicious, its effects immeasurable, its ills cannot be exaggerated – at home and elsewhere.