Eastern Oregon girl contracts plague

Eastern Oregon girl contracts plague
Posted on 10/30/2015

By RACHAEL MCDONALD • OCT 30, 2015

 

Health officials say a teen girl from eastern Oregon has contracted the bubonic plague. Officials say the Crook County girl is believed to have gotten the disease from a flea bite during a hunting trip. 

 

This digitally colorized image shows the yellow-colored Yersinia pestis bacteria, the pathogen that causes bubonic plague, on part of a flea's digestive system.

 

CREDIT NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES VIA CDC 

 

The plague, then known as "The Black Death", wiped out a third of the population of Europe in the middle ages. Jason Davis is with Lane County Public Health. 

 

Davis: "It is absolutely still with us. But thankfully, it's contained primarily to our rodent population and, through advances in science and public health, we've been able to separate ourselves, pretty successfully, from living in close proximity to rodents. And that's part of the reason why we don't have more cases of the plague." 

 

Davis advises staying away from squirrels and other rodents. 

 

The girl, who contracted bubonic plague, is recovering at a hospital intensive care unit. Her condition isn't known. Eight human cases have been diagnosed in Oregon since 1995. No deaths have been reported.