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Protecting Hawai’i and the Pacific from West Nile Virus. Air Transport Issues. Jeff Burgett, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Laurence Lau, Hawai’i Department of Health. A West Nile Virus Primer. A bird disease, mosquitoes transmit it Native to Africa, Asia, parts of Europe
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Protecting Hawai’i and the Pacific from West Nile Virus Air Transport Issues Jeff Burgett, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Laurence Lau, Hawai’i Department of Health
A West Nile Virus Primer • A bird disease, mosquitoes transmit it • Native to Africa, Asia, parts of Europe • Type from Israel appeared in New York in 1999, probably via commercial transport • This strain kills birds, has wide range of bird hosts and mosquito vectors • Humans, other mammals are incidental hosts to virus, can’t pass it on, but can get very ill or die.
West Nile Virus is Exploding • Coast to coast in 4 years • Estimated >800k human infections • Epidemic has not yet peaked
West Nile Virus Basic Transmission Cycle Incidental “dead end” hosts Mosquito vector Virus Bird reservoir hosts
Why Be Concerned for Hawai’i and Pacific Islands? • Have mosquitoes that can transmit WNV • Abundant bird hosts (sparrows, mynahs, finches, etc) • Tropical climate means year-round threat • Once established, no eradication possible • Hawai’i is hub of transport, could be source of WNV for entire region
Our Quality of Life at Risk • In US, over 560 deaths, many more severe illnesses. • Mosquito bites become potentially deadly. • Visitor industry impacts • Native birds decline, go extinct • Costly mosquito control measures • Much harder to control than Dengue
WNV Would Probably Cause Extinctions • Our bird populations are small, not resistant • Historically have been hit hard by malaria, pox • Tests show high mortality rates of some species ‘Io Pop. 1400
Paths of Introduction and Prevention WNV could enter Hawaii through: Migratory birds (low risk?) Bird imports from mainland (high risk) Infected mosquitoes in air/sea cargo (high risk?)
Key Prevention Actions • We have reduced the probability of an infected bird reaching Hawai’i • Postal Embargo • Quarantine most birds prior to shipment • Single entry point (HNL) • Hope to reduce ability of disease cycle to start at ports of entry • Reduce mosquito densities around ports • Reduce bird numbers around ports
Key Prevention Actions • Want to reduce probability of infected mosquito reaching Hawai’i • Data show mosquitoes stow away on aircraft. 80% of mosquitoes are in cargo spaces • Cargo holds are probably preferred due to long periods of open doors, animals as “bait” in holds. • Night loading attracts Culex to aircraft • But...we have little leverage on mainland source airports
So What Does This Mean for Air Transportation Management? Pohnpei Airport
Airport-specific Issues 1 • Safety mandate: extends to protecting workers and public health? • Mosquitoes in aircraft pose risk of WNV introduction, hence “disinsection” is attractive • Mosquitoes at airports pose risk to next destination • Cooperative actions among government agencies are required to address problem
Disinsection • Hawaii has authority to treat aircraft for disease vectors, but… • Which method: residual on walls, aerosol, combo? • Cost borne by carrier • Requires administration of system • May restrict scheduling flexibility • Legal issues with pesticides
Airport-specific Issues 2 • Disinsection of aircraft • On-arrival treatment would increase gate time, may affect scheduling • Baggage/Cargo handling affected • Requires coordination with carrier, regulatory agency • Residual treatment requires aircraft tracking, recertification, notification…
Airport-specific Issues 3 • Mosquitoes • Consider reducing ability of mosquitoes to move via aircraft by • Loading cargo, passengers in daytime • Reducing mosquitoes near airports • Reporting high mosquito conditions to receiving airports • Requires monitoring of mosquitoes • Testing mosquitoes for WNV