CDC & DoD investigating deadly disease threat posed by fast-multiplying exotic tick – Asian Longhorn Tick – CAUSES HUMAN HEMORRAGIC FEVER

Investment Watch

A new invasive tick species capable of transmitting several severe diseases is spreading in the United States, posing an emerging threat to human and animal health, according to a pair of reports issued Thursday.

The Asian longhorned tick is the first invasive tick to arrive in the United States in about 80 years. It’s native to eastern China, Japan, the Russian Far East and the Korean Peninsula and is now also established in Australia and New Zealand.  

www.washingtonpost.com/health/2018/11/29/new-tick-species-capable-transmitting-deadly-disease-is-spreading-us/

The tick reproduces at a much faster rate than most other species. One female tick can reproduce 1,000 to 2,000 eggs at a time without mating.

www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2018/p1129-tick-spreading-widely.html

In Asia, the tick carries a newfound virus that causes human hemorrhagic fever and kills up to 30 percent of its victims.

Call me paranoid all you want, but this is warfare.

The tick has been found in Arkansas, Connecticut, Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, New Jersey, and West Virginia.

The Department of Defense is involved in the investigation including other federal agencies.

www.washingtonpost.com/health/2018/11/29/new-tick-species-capable-transmitting-deadly-disease-is-spreading-us/

These ticks have never before been found in the United States (US) and details on their introduction into New Jersey are still unknown.

H. longicornisis known to transmit the virus that causes severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTSV) to hu-
mans, a disease that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have categorized as an emerging hemorrhagic
fever.

phc.amedd.army.mil/Periodical%20Library/Vector-borne%20Disease%2025%20MAY%202018.pdf

Has 30% kill rate in humans.

The longhorn tick has been known to be infected with Rickettsia, Borrelia, Ehrlichia, Anaplasma, and Theileria species, as well as Heartland and Powassan viruses. The tick has also been linked to severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus, which causes hemorrhagic fever.

www.jwatch.org/fw114816/2018/11/30/tick-linked-hemorrhagic-fever-other-diseases-identified

just nuke bomb my ass. Better than dying from any of those diseases for their Agenda 21/2030 plan.

h/t Pole Cat

Investment Watch

8 thoughts on “CDC & DoD investigating deadly disease threat posed by fast-multiplying exotic tick – Asian Longhorn Tick – CAUSES HUMAN HEMORRAGIC FEVER

  1. SOUNDS LIKE BIO WEAPONRY TO ME……..IN THE MIDDLE OF DEER SEASON. AT LEAST IT GETS COLDER HERE THAN WHERE I WAS…………

    1. Bio weapon for sure …..I suspect the center for disease creation as well as the department of offense know exactly where this came from ……I’m sure they will have a vaccine…..mandatory…blah blah blah……

  2. We’re am at they never had tick disease now they have 30 to 40 cases a year you can call your local health department and ask how many cases they have . I had Lyme disease 8 years ago till this day I have never fully got over it . A bud of mine been fighting Rocky Mountain spotted tick disease . And yes it a bio weapon it came off the east coast an inland

  3. Went and seen a natural doctor been taking this for many years it helps when I have fare up and you will … North American Herb & Spice Oreganol Oil

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