ËÄ»¢Ó°Ôº

NPR for North Texas
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Continuing Coverage: Tracking West Nile

Our 7:33 composite entry includes portions or all of eight reports: 

  1. The opening segment of our live hour-long program
  2. A segment that aired when West Nile claimed its first victim.
  3. A physician disabled by West Nile talks about health effects
  4.  Information on how schools handled outdoor activities
  5. A health expert explaining the origin of the virus
  6.  Details on aerial spraying and the chemical to be used
  7. A follow-up story on effects of the spraying

In 2012, Texas became the national epicenter for cases of human infection from the West Nile virus, and nowhere did the mosquito-borne disease claim more victims than in Dallas County.

Statewide more than 80 Texans died and nearly 2,000 became severely ill.  Dallas’s mayor declared a state of emergency and authorized the city’s first aerial spraying of pesticides since 1966.   

ËÄ»¢Ó°Ôº was already covering the West Nile story in July when the virus claimed its first victim of the season.  Our station made a commitment to educate the public about the illness; recommended precautions; chemicals used in the spraying, and area plans for eliminating mosquitoes.

We also investigated concerns about the environmental and health effects of the spraying.

ËÄ»¢Ó°Ôºâ€™s news team produced dozens of stories; lengthy interviews with health experts; a talk-show discussion about tropical diseases and a live, hour-long call-in that aired as the aerial spraying began.