Tick-Borne Disease Panel Begins Work On Final Report
Tick-Borne Disease Panel
Begins Work On Final Report
By Kendra Bobowick
As daffodils poke through the ground and temperatures lean toward spring, the Tick-Borne Disease Action Committee also moves into a new phase of deliberations. Emerging are the beginnings of a final report that members hope to complete in coming weeks.
As discussion ended Wednesday night, committee chair Dr Robert Grossman said, âHopefully by the end of April weâll make the report. I think thatâs attainable.â Its details, organization, and recommendations will occupy membersâ time in coming days.
Ideas across the table this week began with Mark Alexander, who raised the prospect of deer. âHow does the deer issue fit with disease?â he asked. âIs it a separate bucket?â
He asked if their report would address deer per category: motor vehicle accidents, disease, the forests, etc.
With a different idea of how to present the deerâs role to the task forceâs final report, Kim Harrison concluded, âWe should put out all the data and let the selectmen decide.â The task force will assemble a comprehensive report including information, expert speakersâ summaries, citations, costs, explanations of area townsâ similar reports, references, and recommendations for the Board of Selectmen, which will then make any decisions about tick-borne diseases prevention in Newtown.
As members talked about educating the public, assembling data regarding motor vehicle accidents, deforestation, the tickâs life-cycle, and methods for organizing their report, resident Dave Shugarts interjected, âI hate to be the skunk at the garden party, but â¦â He noted that the deer led to economic issues. How much damage do they do to personal landscaping, to nurseries? âWe should make an attempt,â he said, to âquantifyâ the financial stress caused by deer in Newtown.
Neil Chaudhary, who has assembled thorough motor vehicle versus deer data, agreed to include financial details in his section.
Maggie Shew saw another financial trail, saying, âWe should talk to the vets in the area.â With three dogs all treated for Lyme disease âat $120 a popâ in the last year, she said, âThatâs a huge burden.â How many households are like hers, she wondered. Making another point she said, âDogs really are sentinels for human beings.â Ms Harrison added to the thought: âAnother way to know whatâs going on with disease in town is to look at the dogs.â
Other costs would include residentsâ visits to the doctor. âIf you ball-park it, I think itâs pretty huge,â Ms Shaw said.
Members talked about how to present cost-related information in the report.
What about deer management recommendations, Mr Alexander asked. âDo we vote on if we kill deer? Or break it down to sharpshooting, controlled hunts,â he asked.
Conversation bounced to voting. Mr Chaudhary asked, âI envision a vote, and if something is unanimous, weâre done, throw [that topic] away and get to disagreements and get into the meat of it.â
Dr Grossman noted, âI think there will be less disagreements than you think.â Taking another tangent in conversation, Dr Grossman asked, âAnyone want to say anything about the white footed mouse?â Mary Gaudet-Wilson said, âI think we have to, itâs part of the life-cycle.â
As members talked about what information to include, how to prepare the report, and their coming weeks subcommittee meetings to coordinate different topics of consideration, conversation turned to the âorphan not assigned here,â Mr Alexander said. âHow do we tell if what weâre doing is successful,â he asked. âTick drags? Surveys?â Hearing those two options Dr Grossman said, âItâs expensive.â
âWell â¦â Mr Alexander said. Mr Chaudhary said, âWe can give suggestions not to just monitor, but monitor how?â
Members debated vaccines, but tabled the discussion.
Something Better Than Nothing?
At the committeeâs February 24 meeting, member Dr Peter Licht looked ahead to a final report and concluded, âI think we want to do something if that something is good.â
He also rejected the thought that âsomething is better than nothing,â as the group grappled with what it will recommend and present to selectmen regarding how best to reduce the incidences of tick-borne disease among residents. âLook at things we can do to help, thatâs the crux of the committee,â Dr Licht said later in the meeting. Just âdoing something for the sake of itâ is not what the committee wants, he said.
âSo, we agree,â said Dr Grossman. âWe want something that will be useful.â Vice Chair Dr Michele McLeod felt that âsomething without impact, just to look like weâre doing something,â is unacceptable.
Countering that concept, however, was another idea that even something would benefit the forests, maybe result in a few less car accidents a year, but not necessarily resolve the prevalent disease rates in town.
Instead, the final report should confirm that âyesâ Newtown has a tick-borne disease problem, and âany recommendations should have a reasonable chance of being successful,â said Dr Licht. Both he and Dr McLeod also mentioned a recommendation for measuring success or failure of measures to decrease tick-borne disease.
Regarding the problem, Dr Licht hopes to define its magnitude, include the tickâs life cycle, methods â there are more than one, he noted â of combating the problem, he said. âMr deer,â as he refers to the deer population, emerges in the committeeâs equation in several places, and should be addressed in relation to the forest, motor vehicle accidents, but primarily as the deer relates to Lyme, he proposed.
Member Mark Alexander said, âI think we should make recommendations on all [issues] with the tick-borne disease elevated.â The panel agreed. Members also spoke about including who agreed or disagreed, and why.
Various reports, summaries, and information coordinated by Mr Alexander, Kim Harrison, and Maggie Shaw all found acknowledgement Wednesday as members discussed what pieces of information to include, and how. Would various guest speakersâ summaries become part of an appendix, for example?
Members spoke of their personal views. Regarding the final report, Dr McLeod said, âWe have to try to do this ⦠and be positive about it. We need to look a little bit past the wording and how we feel and get the data down.â Continuing this thought, she mentioned a recent conversation that she and Dr Grossman had with First Selectman Pat Llodra regarding their charge. âShe told us itâs not necessary to interpret data â they want to see it themselves for their own analysis.â
Noting that there will be areas âwhere we are splitâ in opinions, or âyou get people looking at data differently,â Dr Licht said, âWeâll let selectmen read the various arguments and let them decide.â
He said at another point in the meeting, âWe all come to this group with our own histories with Lyme and weâre all passionate about how we feel, but our past affiliations are not a factor â¦â
âRight,â said Dr Grossman. Dr Licht reiterated, âThe committee must make certain recommendations we feel must have a reasonable chance of being successful.â Again his comments met agreement.
Notations of costs associated with various methods of deer or tick population reductions should be included. They talked about chapters to address education, about Lyme, about the problem, and âhow to deal with it,â Dr Licht said.
Upcoming events open to the public include a Lyme Disease Seminar and Health Fair on Wednesday, April 7. The fair runs from 6 to 9 pm at Western Connecticut State Universityâs Westside student center. Free admission. Guest speakers are from 7 to 9.
Also at WestConn: Connecticut State Entomologist Kirby Stafford will discuss the origins and nature of Lyme disease and means to prevent its infectious spread to humans in a lecture Thursday, March 18.
âFight the Bite: Ticks and Lyme Disease,â presented as part of the WestConn âScience at Nightâ lecture series, will be at 7 pm in Room 125 of the Science Building on the universityâs midtown campus, 181 White Street. A reception with light refreshments will be held in the Science Building Atrium following the lecture. Admission will be free and the public is invited to attend.
On March 19 members from the Department of Agriculture will be conducting forest inspections at several locations in Newtown. Tick Borne Disease Action Committee members will attend.