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Re: What's to fear about warming oceans? Flesh-eating bacteria

By: zzstar in FFT4 | Recommend this post (0)
Thu, 23 Mar 23 7:08 PM | 30 view(s)
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Msg. 06629 of 11396
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Some guy a couple of months ago died in Fort Lauderdale after eating raw oysters from the Gulf and developed a flesh eating bacterial infection. He lived about ten days during which he was amputated and other serious surgeries.

http://www.yahoo.com/now/2022-deadly-eating-oysters-florida-171800408.html

“ This summer, oysters from Louisiana sickened Floridians. A Broward County man died after eating a raw oyster from Louisiana at a Fort Lauderdale seafood restaurant. It was the second death in Florida within weeks from Vibrio vulnificus, a bacteria that lives in coastal waters and typically sickens people through the consumption of raw shellfish or by entering an open wound, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Broward man had eaten oysters during a birthday celebration and two days later developed a fever and abdominal pain. At the hospital, he tested positive for Vibrio vulnificus. After a week of emergency surgeries and a double amputation, he was pronounced dead.”

Go figure.


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The above is a reply to the following message:
What's to fear about warming oceans? Flesh-eating bacteria
By: zzstar
in FFT4
Thu, 23 Mar 23 7:04 PM
Msg. 06627 of 11396

“ The researchers used data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to track V. vulnificus infections from 1988 to 2018. The scientists focused on reported cases along the East Coast, which Lake said is known to be a global hot spot for such infections.

The study found that infections increased from 10 to 80 a year over the 30-year period and that cases were occurring in new regions.

The lead author of the study, Elizabeth Archer, a postgraduate researcher at the University of East Anglia, said infections in the late 1980s were mostly seen in Gulf Coast states and areas along the southern Atlantic coast but rarely north of Georgia.”

http://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/fear-warming-oceans-flesh-eating-bacteria-rcna75935

Florida’s Gulf coast is especially vulnerable with red tides and flesh eating bacteria infections. Some of its nicest beaches, like Bonita Springs closed due to toxins……..

Several people wading in flood waters also got flesh eating bacterial infections after the last hurricane that hit them last year.

As a kid growing in Greece I used to go into the sea all the time when I had cuts and watch them heal overnight. The sea was my disinfectant. Now, in this country I usually avoid the ocean if I have any cuts, especially in populated beaches.


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