Rising temperatures leave El Paso at increased risk of West Nile infection, study says

By John Upton and Kyle Jones
Climate Central/El Paso Times

Elisa Sierra had just given birth to twins when she became infected with West Nile virus.

The infection left Sierra, who lives on the West Side of El Paso, with meningitis and damaged her brain.

Sierra is a clinical social worker who used to provide therapy. She’s in a similar line of work following her 2015 illness, but she doesn’t provide counseling any more because she’s no longer confident she can think quickly enough.

“You have to be able to think on your feet,” she said. “I have trouble remembering simple words.”

Elisa Sierra, who still suffers severe effects from West Nile three years after she contracted it while living in El Paso.

City data shows Sierra is one of about 100 people in El Paso who have been affected by a severe form of West Nile since 2000, which was around the time it was discovered in the U.S.

As El Paso and other governments work to reduce infections, a new analysis by Climate Central, a nonadvocacy group that researches and reports on the changing climate, shows rising temperatures have increased the number of days each year when mosquito-borne diseases are likely to be spread across the United States.

Some of the greatest increases in risk occurred in El Paso.

Climate Central analysts examined the number of days each year that temperatures were optimal for the transmission of mosquito-borne diseases, which is between 61°F and 93°F. There were more than 240 such days in El Paso last year.

Carlos Sarmiento, a code compliance officer with the city's vector control program, shows a flask with mosquito larva at the offices in El Paso’s Lower Valley. Sarmiento lays traps in ponding areas and other locations where mosquitoes are reported so specimens can be analyzed for West Nile virus and other diseases.

Of the 244 cities analyzed, most were found to have experienced an increase in the average number of mosquito disease danger days each year since 1970. El Paso's increase of 33 days was a larger rise than all but four other cities — Reno, Nev., Las Cruces, N.M. and San Francisco and Santa Maria, Calif, according to the study.

More:West Nile virus found in more areas in El Paso County as rain increases mosquito threat

In El Paso, West Nile is the mosquito-borne disease of main concern. In other cities, Zika, dengue, chikungunya, Yellow Fever and Eastern Equine Encephalitis viruses are also spreading. Each of these diseases can cause crippling health problems, and each of them depends on specific environmental conditions to thrive.

“Transmission of mosquito-borne diseases depends on a bunch of different biological processes,” said Marta Shocket, a Stanford University biologist investigating the role of temperature on the spread of diseases by mosquitoes.

“It depends on the how long the mosquitoes are living, how many mosquitoes there are, how much they’re biting,” Shocket said. “All of those processes depend on temperature.”

Vector Control code compliance officer Carlos Sarmiento pulls out a mosquito trap from a tree in a ponding area along Tierra Dorada Drive across from Chester E. Jordan Elementary School in East El Paso.

While risks of contracting diseases from mosquitoes have risen with temperatures, it’s difficult to measure the impacts.

Other factors also influence transmission rates, such as efforts to reduce mosquito populations, keep them out of homes and eliminate standing water. And diseases continue to emerge and spread into new areas.

El Paso reported its first West Nile case of 2018 on August 8, a later start than usual, according to the city.

An El Paso man, who asked that his name be withheld when discussing his medical history, was among 14 people in El Paso diagnosed last year with the serious neuroinvasive disease that the West Nile virus can cause.

The man said he didn’t realize he’d been bitten by a mosquito until the West Nile virus reached his brain, nearly killing him.

“I didn’t have any welts,” he said.

Following visits to an emergency care clinic as he suffered a neurological breakdown, he was hospitalized and diagnosed with the most serious form of disease the virus can cause, which occurs when the virus invades the nervous system.

He had to learn to walk again and is sensitive to light. It hurts his eyes, and sometimes exposure makes him sneeze uncontrollably. He suffers from aches and has become more vulnerable to other health problems.

“I feel like I’m forever inside a cotton ball, everything’s just fuzzy,” he said. “I wound up with a bout of Bell’s Palsy. I lost sensation in half my face, and I wasn’t able to speak anymore. I was slurring my words.”

Vector Control code compliance officer Carlos Sarmiento carries a mosquito trap out of a ponding area along Tierra Dorada Drive across from Chester E. Jordan Elementary School in East El Paso. Sarmiento counted seven mosquitoes trapped inside.

City officials spray pesticides to control mosquito populations and urge residents to prevent the pests from breeding by checking for standing water. They also suggest using bug spray and wearing long-sleeved shirts and long pants to avoid being bitten, particularly around dusk and dawn.

Doug Watts, a researcher at the University of Texas, El Paso, has been working with a pediatrician to test samples from new mothers for West Nile antibodies. The samples suggest that just 4 percent of El Paso residents have been infected during their lifetimes.

Perhaps counterintuitively, the limited exposure of El Paso residents so far to West Nile virus can make them more vulnerable to the disease, Watts said.

“The prevalence of this virus in the community appears to be very low,” Watts said. “Because it’s very low, you don’t have what we call a high prevalence of herd immunity. There’s a lot of people that are still susceptible.”

Elisa Sierra, who still suffers severe effects from West Nile three years after she contracted it while living in El Paso.

Three years after her infection, Sierra is angry that her condition wasn’t diagnosed by medical staff more quickly. She’s also frustrated that it’s hard to find specialists who can help her.

“Before I got the disease, I figured it only affects babies and old people,” Sierra said. “It’s important for people to understand that it doesn’t matter your age. You need to protect yourself.”

Sierra is slowly recovering from the disease, but she expects it will affect her for the rest of her life.

“I had to learn how to write again,” Sierra said. “I lost brain matter.”

This story was produced through a partnership with Climate Central, a non-advocacy group that researches and reports on the changing climate.