CHEYENNE (WNE) — The Wyoming Department of Health wants residents to take steps to help prevent hantavirus, a rare but potentially deadly disease spread by infected deer mice.
“As spring arrives and people begin cleaning cabins, sheds, garages, old vehicles and other outbuildings that may have been closed up during the winter months, people should be aware of hantavirus risks and practice safe rodent cleanup,” said Courtney Tillman, infectious disease epidemiologist with WDH, in a news release.
“People can catch hantavirus through the droppings, urine or saliva of infected mice,” Tillman said. “People breathe in the virus when dust is stirred up, making cleaning activities such as sweeping and vacuuming particularly risky where there are signs of mice.”
Hantavirus can cause symptoms including tiredness, fever, muscle pain, diarrhea and coughing.
Anyone with these symptoms after a potential rodent exposure should contact a health care provider quickly.
While there is no specific treatment for hantavirus infection, those infected receive supportive care such as hydration and other symptom treatment.
To safely clean areas where rodents may have been, follow these steps:
For more information about hantavirus, visit tinyurl.com/wdh-hantavirus.
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