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    29 Kommentare

    1. Not_TbagJimmy on

      3 summers ago, I had anaplasmosis. Flu like symptoms, after 5 days my fever spiked to 104. I thought I was dying, crazyness

    2. Another side effect of global climate change – warmer climate means more ticks

      The one that makes you allergic to meat is fun

    3. Neat_Movie_991 on

      I live in the country by a lake. Everything I do is outside. Garden, swim, boating and hiking. Every year I may get 2 or 3 on me all summer long. This year I have gotten near 100. We’ve treated our property and spray bug spray on us when we go out now. Tuck jeans in our socks, strip clothes at door and shower as soon as we come in. It’s NEVER been like this before. Been out here 11/12 years. Be careful out there, y’all!

    4. HiMyNameIsGabriel on

      A co-workers daughter lost her life to a tick bite last week. She was 12. First I ever heard of that. I wasn’t even remotely aware that a tick bite can be that death.

    5. SufficientPick321 on

      Need more Opossums, chickens, wild turkeys, ducks, foxes, coyotes, snakes, frogs, toads, lizards, fire ants, beetles, spiders, centipedes, and certain mites. They keep tick populations down.

    6. Wake-up-Neo-sheep on

      NOTHING to do with those tick box’s. Naw. Couldn’t be.

      They aren’t even trying anymore. They just want 98% of everyone dead. And they will get it. Even if a lot of them die. They/we are going ahead with all this shit. The ticks are nothing compared to what comes next

    7. SurprzTrustFall on

      TLDR:

      Powassan virus is a rare but potentially severe tick-borne disease primarily transmitted by the blacklegged (deer) tick and the groundhog tick. Found mostly in the Northeast and Great Lakes regions, cases have been trending upward. There are no specific treatments or vaccines available, so strict tick avoidance is essential.

      Unlike Lyme disease, which typically requires a tick to feed for 16 to 24 hours, Powassan virus can be transmitted into your bloodstream very rapidly—sometimes within as little as 15 minutes of a tick attaching. Ticks are active from late spring through mid-fall.

      Because Powassan is a virus, antibiotics will not treat it. Hospitalization is often required for severe cases to manage symptoms (such as rehydration and pain control).

      About 10% of people who develop severe brain inflammation die.

    8. How2trainUrXenomorph on

      Who was that one guy saying he would do this? The red meat tick guy? He assaulted America openly

    9. This is crazy! I’ve gotten a ton of ticks this year in North Florida. I’ve only ever gotten 1 or none in the 35 years leading up to this year. I’ve been bit by least 20 since January, my kids as well. I’m actually going to get teated for Lyme’s tomorrow. I haven’t noticed much, but I keep getting upset stomach when I’m smoking pork or grilling steaks. I think it’s just the smokiness and that I don’t eat breakfast.

    10. boardjock42 on

      Any chance the first cases were found in the vicinity of a biolab? Asking for a friend…

    11. Bill g@tes has a vaccine for that😂😂😂😂

      Your favorite computer guy now pushes healthcare and makes billions from it..

      Imagine that.

      Create the problem…. Then sell the solution.

    12. Remember those scientists in that peer-reviewed article saying that creating tick-borne illnesses to fight redmi conception was a good thing. Yeah those people are doing more than that

    13. I live in the middle of the city and found one on my dog just from our yard. Luckily it was dead since we treat our dog monthly.

    14. Waste-Leg842 on

      I think the gov is out to get us as much as the next guy.. but. I work outdoors every day. I cruise timber, mark boundary lines etc and there are the same amount of ticks as ever. Some places have them. Some don’t. I may find 10 one day. I may not have one on me for a week. Spray permethrin on clothing and be cautious of them. Nothing more nothing less

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