Committee Weighs The Threat Of Lyme In Newtown
Committee Weighs The Threat
Of Lyme In Newtown
By Kendra Bobowick
âItâs here; I wouldnât ever say itâs not here,â said Health District Director Donna Culbert, referring to the variety of diseases carried by ticks and infecting residents. âItâs here,â she said to Tick-Borne Disease Action Committee members Wednesday night. âSo, we try to get information out there to the public about risk.â
Ticks are in wooded areas, fields, parks, and backyards where children may run to retrieve basketballs, baseballs, or sticks for their pets. Ticks are in the underbrush in local walking trails, at the edges of gardens where more densely forested areas border lawns, or along walking routes to schools.
Naming the many measures people can take to reduce their exposure to a tick-borne disease, Ms Culbert warned, âUnless youâre 100 percent compliant â¦â skipping beyond steps people can take to reduce their risk, she named the consequences, âIt only takes one [tick] bite.â Measures include protective clothing in light colors where ticks are visible, tucking pant legs into socks, spraying the yard for ticks, and using bug sprays before entering woods. Residents can also use landscaping methods to reduce the likelihood of ticks entering the yard, use deer fencing, and remember to check themselves inch-by-inch for ticks or signs of a bite.
Group member Dr Peter Licht would note also, âIf you find one on you [contact your doctor] for a prophylactic.â The preventative medical treatment might include an antibiotic to protect against contracting Lyme disease, for one. The first 24 hours is often a critical time period for preventative measures. Seek prophylactic treatment âright away,â he stressed.
Taking the tick and sending it for disease testing then waiting for results only generates a âlag time,â he argued. While checking for ticks is a good idea, he said, âTake the next step.â
Maggie Shaw later added, âWeâre talking about a tick bite, you can get treated the next day and go out and get bit again, there could be more than one tick ⦠this is more serious.â
Member Kim Harrison asked Ms Culbert, âIf there were no financial restrictions and you could wave a wand, what would be helpful to combat [disease].â The reply: âMoney doesnât solve problems.â Alluding to a concern, she continued, âPeople are very casual about tick-borne disease.â With so much information âout there,â people may be overrun with flyers, commercials, messages, members agreed.
Frustrated, Ms Harrison said, âSo, they donât âget itâ unless they âget it.ââ
Ms Culbert added, âOr, they get it, and get over it.â
How many people get worse? What if a co-infection of several tick-borne diseases is missed? What if the classic rash is absent and people believe they do not have Lyme? Also frustrated, Dr Licht said, âItâs eminently treatable.â
Ms Culbert said, âOur information needs to be relevant, current, important.â The group considered how to successfully impress their message upon residents. Would Public Service Announcements or an email list help? They think a fresh approach or monthly message related to tick disease prevention may help. Ms Culbert is agreeable to working on an improved campaign to get peopleâs attention, she said.
Adding another thought, she said, âI donât want ticks to run our life. They are a fact of life.â She cautioned, âIf youâre better about managing your property, yourself ⦠you canât be casual about it, itâs a risk. This is Newtown, Connecticut, Fairfield County. Itâs a risk.â
Education in the schools is important, but the parents and adults need to be a main focus of education efforts, the group said. As Neil Chaudhary made his point, âEducating kids is great, but if Iâm 12, I wonât do anything you tell me.â Pulling up your socks and tucking your pants into them is âdorky,â he insisted. âAnd, I would want to play in the woods.â
David Delia asked, âHow serious is Lyme?â
âVery,â said Ms Culbert.
âFrom one to ten,â he asked.
Naming heart disease and substance abuse among the high-ranking health threats, Ms Culbert decided, âItâs among the top three.â
Mr Delia promoted getting some âdramatic factsâ in front of the public. Dr Licht said to Ms Culbert, âYou can punt this question if you want, but what is your opinion on limiting the deer population? Should it have a role?â
Smiling, Ms Culbertâs answer was long: âWhat I will say â I think some of the findings of this group is a huge opportunity to educate the public. I think you can catch a lot of attention and the fact that you have different opinions â you can generate a lot of interest regardless of your opinion.â She agreed, âThatâs sort of a punt.â Getting to the deer, she said, âThe numbers show a lot of deer and a lot of problems. Theyâre having an impact.
âPersonally,â she thinks, âyou need to walk before you run.â Ms Culbert explained: âWhere now is hunting legal and allowable already? Can you increase access to land already available? Thatâs not changing anything and itâs walking before you run.â
While Ms Culbertâs answer alluded to a way around a deer-culling program, the group soon heard the opposite from Dr Thomas Draper of Danbury Hospital.
As an attendee, he told the group, âThe fundamental problem is the deer.â He agrees with efforts to spray and check for ticks, but said again, âWeâre treading water until we address the fundamental issue â the deer.â The deer is where âthe rubber hits the road,â he said.
Vaccines could be another viable measure to combat diseases. Dr Michelle McLeod said, âMost epidemics have been conquered with vaccines.â Polio, measles, included, she said. Dr Licht would âloveâ to see legislators from various states infected with Lyme and other diseases to collaborate, and mobilize efforts to promote a vaccine.
Further into the conversation, Ms Harrison interjected, âItâs all well and great, but you canât hold your breath for a vaccine or [other methods].â Diseases are getting âworse and worse,â she said. âVaccines are great and I hope and pray it works, but itâs not taking action, itâs pie in the sky.â
Countering Ms Harrisonâs thoughts, Dr McLeod asked if it was not âpie in the skyâ to think that reducing the deer population was the answer.
What about simultaneous efforts? Dr Licht asked.
Visit the health districtâs page at newtown-ct.gov. The action committee will also meet weekly through January, February, and March. See the townâs websites for times and agendas.