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RBH

Official ERA expert on Third Party Football
Member
Nov 2, 2017
33,027
A life-threatening bacterial infection typically spread through rat urine sickened a record number of people in New York City last year—and this year looks on track for another all-time high, the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene reports.

The infection is leptospirosis, which can cause a range of symptoms, including non-specific ones like fever, headache, chills, muscle aches, vomiting, diarrhea, and cough. But, if left untreated, can become severe, causing kidney failure, liver damage, jaundice, hemorrhage, bloody eyes (conjunctival suffusion), respiratory distress, and potentially death.

The bacteria that causes it—spirochete bacteria of the genus Leptospira—infect rats, which shed the bacteria in their urine. The germs jump to people through direct contact with open wounds or mucous membranes.

New York City has long been in a (mostly losing) war with its rat population, which last year was estimated to be as many as 3 million. Mayor Eric Adams has made fighting the rat population a key initiative, and just last week, the city council proposed the latest strategy to curtail the furry brown rodent's colony: birth control in the form of salty pellets.

Still, leptospirosis has not been a prime concern from the rats' mischief until recently. Between 2001 and 2020, the city logged an average of just three leptospirosis cases a year—and some of those were travel related. But, things took a turn during the pandemic when the rat population seemed to boom. From 2021 and 2022, the average shot up to 15. In 2023, there were 24 cases, the highest number of cases ever recorded for a single year. And as of April 10, there have been six cases so far.

That number of cases so far this year is concerning given that Leptospira bacteria are "fragile," as the NYC health department puts it. They die quickly in the freezing temperatures of winter and the dry heat of summer. Their main time to thrive is in warm, moist conditions. Last year, the months with the most cases were June and October. The health department noted that climate change, which is causing excessive rain and unseasonably warm temperatures, may be partly driving the uptick in cases.

In a health advisory released last week, the city's health department advised clinicians to be on the lookout for cases, which are treated with common oral antibiotics when mild or intravenous doses when severe. Symptoms typically develop in 5 to 14 days after an exposure, but can show up after anywhere from 2 to 30 days.

Of the 98 locally acquired cases that the city has recorded between 2001 and 2023, nearly all were in men (94 percent), and the median age was 50, with an age range of 20 to 80 years. Most often, the cases occurred in the Bronx (37), followed by Manhattan (28), Brooklyn (19), Queens (10), and Staten Island (4). Cases presented to clinicians with acute kidney and liver failure and occasionally severe respiratory involvement. Of the 98 cases, six died.
arstechnica.com

Life-threatening rat pee infections reach record levels in NYC

Between 2001 and 2020, there was an average of 3 cases per year. Last year's tally was 24.






View: https://youtu.be/mspDJNZLotA?si=zS4pgDwW3Qotfmk3
 

Slayven

Never read a comic in his life
Moderator
Oct 25, 2017
93,318
One would hope to have zero exposure to rat urine, let alone some that can kill you
 

Godfather

Game on motherfuckers
Avenger
Oct 25, 2017
3,506
How much rat urine does the FDA allow in my food?

Asking for a friend.
 

Slayven

Never read a comic in his life
Moderator
Oct 25, 2017
93,318
How will Eric Adams fuck this up and make it weird?
 

krazen

Member
Oct 27, 2017
13,201
Gentrified Brooklyn
How will Eric Adams fuck this up and make it weird?

"We've got a underutilized rat killing workforce that's right there, a group that's agile, young, and can get into places that we can't. It's why I am defunding free Pre-Kindergarten and starting something I call…"

(Cue Jay-Z/Alicia Keys "NY State of Mind" as an intern tries to get an ancient torrented copy of powerpoint working)

"Extermina-kids. Lets get these kids on a path to employment early. Let these five years olds learn the value of a dollar, and give back to the city that's given them so much in those first four years of life."
 

Davidion

Charitable King
Member
Oct 27, 2017
6,126
As a New Yorker, two minds on this.

One: yes potentially dangerous bacteria that should be fragile getting any kind of traction is not good and worthy of concern

Two: There have been less than 100 cases in the last 13 or so years and great this is going to just be more fuel for dumb fuck data (if not full blown) illiterate NYC concern trolls
 

Foffy

Banned
Oct 25, 2017
16,399
You're telling me installing more pigs on the subway line hasn't curbed this? What a shame!
 

Rosebud

Two Pieces
Member
Apr 16, 2018
43,725
I know someone who died from this, he stepped on rat piss while playing football (soccer) outside
 

Ouroboros

Member
Oct 27, 2017
13,053
United States
latest
 

maigret

Member
Jun 28, 2018
3,205
That number of cases so far this year is concerning given that Leptospira bacteria are "fragile," as the NYC health department puts it. They die quickly in the freezing temperatures of winter and the dry heat of summer. Their main time to thrive is in warm, moist conditions. Last year, the months with the most cases were June and October. The health department noted that climate change, which is causing excessive rain and unseasonably warm temperatures, may be partly driving the uptick in cases.

Oh so there's your problem.
 

julia crawford

Took the red AND the blue pills
Member
Oct 27, 2017
35,413
perhaps extend healthcare to this 3 million plus population and cure the rats before they infect humans?
 

nded

Member
Nov 14, 2017
10,595
Is this one of those things where there were 6 rat piss infections one year then 9 the next so there's a record breaking 50% increase.
 

crimsonheadGCN

The Fallen
Oct 25, 2017
3,047
Clifton, NJ
Is this one of those things where there were 6 rat piss infections one year then 9 the next so there's a record breaking 50% increase.

It sounds like it, according to this post:

As a New Yorker, two minds on this.

One: yes potentially dangerous bacteria that should be fragile getting any kind of traction is not good and worthy of concern

Two: There have been less than 100 cases in the last 13 or so years and great this is going to just be more fuel for dumb fuck data (if not full blown) illiterate NYC concern trolls