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Mosquito season is looming large in Texas, and with it, renewed fears of mosquito-borne illnesses. Several Zika cases have already in the Rio Grande Valley.Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin have come up with a new tool they hope can curb the spread of the disease. They have created a computer model that can predict in real-time the risk of a Zika outbreak if there are two Zika cases in the same area.
鈥淔or Zika to be detected in Texas, three things need to happen,鈥 says , a co-author of the and a PhD student.
First, Zika must be transported to Texas by an infected individual. A mosquito must then bite that individual and transmit the disease to another person. Finally, either of these infected people must go to a doctor and receive a diagnosis, which is then reported to public health officials.
鈥淚t鈥檚 that third factor that makes tracking Zika very challenging because only about 6 percent of Zika cases are reported,鈥 Fox says.
What you鈥檒l hear in this segment:
鈥 How the model takes into account these three factors\
鈥 Why locally contained epidemics are more likely than Zika transmission across multiple counties
鈥 Why the Lower Rio Grande Valley and the Houston metropolitan area are at high risk of an epidemic
Written by Molly Smith.
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