Florida & Louisiana Lead Flesh-eating Bacteria Deaths

Florida & Louisiana Lead Flesh-eating Bacteria Deaths

There has been an unusual and concerning surge in Vibrio vulnificus infections and deaths across the southeastern United States, especially in Florida. This bacterium, commonly known as "flesh-eating bacteria," thrives in warm, brackish seawater and can cause severe, rapidly progressing illness, including necrotizing fasciitis, and has a high fatality rate. While infections are generally rare, experts describe the current situation as "certainly not normal" and are investigating potential contributing factors, including the impacts of recent and forecasted hurricane seasons and environmental indicators like plankton and chlorophyll concentrations. Public health officials are emphasizing preventative measures and immediate medical attention for suspected infections, especially for high-risk people

  • Current Toll (as of August 7-8, 2025):
  • Florida: 16 cases and 5 deaths reported this year.
  • A second death in Bay County was reported within the past three weeks, bringing the state total to five.
  • Confirmed cases are spread across various counties including Bay, Escambia, St. Johns, Santa Rosa, Broward, Duval, Hillsborough, Lee, Manatee, Okaloosa, and Walton.
  • Louisiana: 17 cases and 4 deaths reported this year, exceeding previous annual averages.
  • North Carolina: 7 cases and 1 death reported this year so far.
  • Mississippi: 3 cases reported this year so far.
  • In total, at least 10 deaths have been attributed to Vibrio vulnificus across these states this year.
  • Historical Context (Florida Cases & Deaths):
  • 2024: 82 cases, 19 deaths (exacerbated by Hurricane Helene).
  • 2023: 46 cases, 11 deaths.
  • 2022: 74 cases, 17 deaths (unusual increase due to Hurricane Ian).
  • The current 16 cases and 5 deaths in Florida for 2025, while lower than recent full-year totals, are significant given it's "early on in the summer."
  • Fatality Rate: Approximately 1 in 5 (20%) people infected with Vibrio vulnificus die, with bloodstream infections being fatal about 50% of the time.

III. Main Themes and Important Ideas

A. Nature of Vibrio vulnificus and Infection Routes:

  • Vibrio vulnificus is a naturally occurring "halophilic" bacterium, meaning it requires salt, and thrives in warm, brackish seawater. Most infections occur between May and October when water temperatures are warmest.
  1. Primary infection routes:Exposure of open wounds: The bacteria can enter the body through cuts, scrapes, or broken skin exposed to warm salt or brackish water. The Florida Department of Health explicitly states, "Water and wounds do not mix. Do not enter the water if you have fresh cuts or scrapes."
  2. Consumption of contaminated seafood: Eating raw shellfish, particularly oysters, is a common source of infection.

B. Severity of Illness and Symptoms:

  • While severe illness is rare, Vibrio vulnificus can cause rapid destruction of tissue under the skin, known as necrotizing fasciitis, leading to death within days if untreated.
  • Symptoms: Rash, high fever, chills, vomiting, nausea, cramping, abdominal pain, skin breakdown, and ulcers. For wound infections, visible signs can appear within hours, including redness, swelling, painful "bull's-eye" blisters.
  • Systemic Infection (Sepsis): The bacterium can invade the bloodstream, causing a severe and life-threatening illness with symptoms like fever, chills, decreased blood pressure (septic shock), and blistering skin lesions.

Episoder(227)

Is the Fog Making People Sick? Science, Weather, and a Viral Winter Myth

Is the Fog Making People Sick? Science, Weather, and a Viral Winter Myth

Fog is back and so are the claims.In Florida and across the southern U.S., people are reporting headaches, breathing issues, infections, and other illnesses during foggy weather, with some blaming “to...

12 Jan 31min

2025 Weather Forecasting: Hotter Earth, Badder Hurricanes, Smarter Forecasts

2025 Weather Forecasting: Hotter Earth, Badder Hurricanes, Smarter Forecasts

In 2025, weather forecasting reached a turning point—just as climate extremes pushed storms to new limits.ull description:In this episode of Meteorology Matters, meteorologist Rob Jones examines how 2...

31 Des 202528min

Weather Risk in America: Brain Drain, Disaster Failure, and Science Under Strain

Weather Risk in America: Brain Drain, Disaster Failure, and Science Under Strain

In 2025, weather risk in the United States became about more than storms—it exposed systemic failures in disaster response, science, and preparedness.Full description:In this episode of Meteorology Ma...

30 Des 202514min

A Life of Hurricane Warnings, A Legacy of Lives Saved: Dr. Neil L. Frank (1931–2025)

A Life of Hurricane Warnings, A Legacy of Lives Saved: Dr. Neil L. Frank (1931–2025)

The Life and Legacy of Dr. Neil L. FrankDr. Neil L. Frank (1931-2025) was a transformative figure in meteorology, widely regarded as the nation's foremost authority on hurricanes. His career spanned t...

24 Des 202511min

Holiday Forecast: What the Weather Means for You this Christmas to New Year

Holiday Forecast: What the Weather Means for You this Christmas to New Year

🎧 Whether you’re flying, driving, or staying put, this is the forecast you actually need.As the year comes to a close, millions of Americans are on the move—and the atmosphere is anything but coopera...

24 Des 202539min

Killing America’s Weather IQ!

Killing America’s Weather IQ!

In December 2025, the Trump administration announced plans to dismantle the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), one of the world’s most critical institutions for weather, climate, and atm...

21 Des 202527min

Poisoned by Design: Plastics, Politics, and the Fight for a Livable Future

Poisoned by Design: Plastics, Politics, and the Fight for a Livable Future

Environmental Health, Climate Policy, and Adaptation StrategiesThis document synthesizes findings from multiple sources on the interconnected crises of chemical pollution, climate change politicizatio...

18 Des 202531min

The 2025 Hurricane Season and the Impact of Hurricane Melissa

The 2025 Hurricane Season and the Impact of Hurricane Melissa

The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season was a "very unusual" and paradoxical period, marked by a record-breaking concentration of high-intensity storms alongside a complete absence of U.S. hurricane landfa...

4 Des 202529min

Populært innen Politikk og nyheter

aftenpodden
giver-og-gjengen-vg
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
forklart
aftenpodden-usa
i-retten
stopp-verden
popradet
fotballpodden-2
det-store-bildet
rss-gukild-johaug
rss-ness
dine-penger-pengeradet
nokon-ma-ga
aftenbla-bla
e24-podden
hanna-de-heldige
rss-dannet-uten-piano
bt-dokumentar-2
rss-utenrikskomiteen-med-bogen-og-grasvik