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Dealing with mosquitoes

It used to be just the annoying symptoms of itching and scratching we wanted to avoid, but those days are over.  Since 1999 it's West Nile Virus that has us freaked out about these most annoying of critters.

Symptoms of West Nile

Between 3 days and 2 weeks after being bitten by an infected mosquito, 4 out of 5 people infected with WNV show NO symptoms at all.  Home free!  But for the other 20 percent who DO respond, it's with symptoms that range from unpleasant to debilitating and even fatal in some cases.  In its mildest forms WNV is like the flu, with feaver, aches, nausea, vomiting, rashes - yikes, that's mild?  Wait.  For some people it's all that PLUS paralysis, coma, tremors, and vision loss.  Some will suffer these symptoms for week and recover, some never recover completely from the symptoms, and some even die.

First defense - getting rid of mosquitoes

You've seen this before but to repeat:

Protecting your skin

Applying a repellant containing DEET is, hands down, the most effective protection (short of staying indoors or never exposing an inch of skin when outdoors).  It's been around since the '50s and the EPA says it's safe for humans - though only if you follow the directions exactly.   The American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Environmental Health says it's safe for children over two months of age - when used according to directions. Even in lower concentrations, DEET shouldn'tl be used by pregnant women or applied to infants, and many sources advise not spraying DEET directly on the skin of any child - spray it on your hand first and then rub on their skin.

But some people have reactions to DEET - like skin irritations that look like sunburn, and numbness if the product touches sensitive spots like lips.  So definitely DON'T apply it to broken skin or near your mouth or eyes. 

Non-DEET products

More help

Wanna have a party?

My local gardening Yahoo group had a lively discussion of this question and the consensus seemed to be that a combination of citronella candles AND one or two oscillating fans directed at your guests WILL enable you to have a party outdoors during mosquito season.  And everyone agreed these tactics are far nicer than the annoying sizzle of those mosquito zappers.

For more information online

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