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West Nile Virus Activity 2016

May contain: animal, bird, and crow

West Nile virus Facts

  1. West Nile virus is the most common mosquito-borne disease that affect residents in Los Angeles County
  2. Public health agencies detect West Nile virus every year in L.A. County. This means the virus is found naturally in our city environments, which means it's endemic.
  3. Our agency uses routine traps to colect samples of mosquitoes. The mosquito samples are tested for a mosquito-borne diseases, such as West Nile virus. In addition, dead birds, which can carry West Nile virus, are submitted for testing.

Our agency reports data related to mosquitoes. Human cases are reported by the L.A. County Department of Public Health and Pasadena Health Department.


2016 West Nile Virus Activity

West Nile Virus Positive Mosquito Samples

A sample is a random collection of 10-50 mosquitoes from a trap. Positive mosquito samples from routine and randomized trapping provide insight into of the spread of West Nile virus.

City/CommunityNumber of WNV+ Mosquito Samples
Arcadia14
Azusa2
Baldwin Park3
Claremont2
El Monte4
Glendora1
Irwindale1
La Verne1
Pasadena3
Pomona6
San Dimas4
San Gabriel8
Walnut1
West Covina7
TOTAL57

West Nile Virus Positive Dead Birds

People report dead birds they observe in their community. Positive dead birds are an indication West Nile virus is widespread in the region.

Dead bird data is stored with California Department of Public Health. You can access the data HERE.

Wonder how your community compares to the rest of Southern California?