Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Zika virus: Mosquitoes now spreading the disease near Miami's Little River neighborhood : miamiherald





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Zika virus: Mosquitoes now spreading the disease near Miami's Little River neighborhood

Zika virus: Mosquitoes now spreading the disease near Miami's Little River neighborhood
Zika virus: Mosquitoes now spreading the disease near Miami's Little River neighborhood
1:22 UM holds forum on Zika Pause8:26 What is a virtual colonoscopy?2:20 County announces Zika positive mosquitoes0:41 Why are more people surviving heart attacks?2:07 Marijuana: Uncertain Medicine1:53 FSU research team makes Zika drug breakthrough1:51 Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz condemns GOP for failing to pass Zika funding before recess2:55 Mayor Gimenez reacts to Zika cases found in Miami Beach1:25 Miami Beach sanitation workers ramp up Zika mosquito prevention efforts1:40 Crowds show up for Wynwood Art Walk, regardless of Zika concerns1:52 NIH on Zika: "We're in a race of time to get best vaccine"


let alone srjnews

Drones To Be Used Spreading Sterile Mosquitoes In Zika Areas

Drones To Be Used Spreading Sterile Mosquitoes In Zika Areas
Drones To Be Used Spreading Sterile Mosquitoes In Zika Areas
Federal government said Wednesday to be supporting the two groups that want to deploy drones to fight Zika.They will be helped with funds in the development of such drones that could be capable of dropping off Zika-fighting mosquitoes or ferry lab samples from remote regions.The groups now joins a batch of inventive solutions in the fight against Zika virus and also other mosquito-borne diseases which are being funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).


besides go

Turbine Sprayers Deployed to Fight Zika Mosquitoes in South Florida

Turbine Sprayers Deployed to Fight Zika Mosquitoes in South Florida
Turbine Sprayers Deployed to Fight Zika Mosquitoes in South Florida
Mosquito control officials in Miami-Dade and Broward County, Florida are continuing to fight the Zika virus with an unusual method: turbines on trucks.As new cases -- and new areas of local transmission -- continue to be identified, health departments are varying the approaches to reduce risk.The vehicle-mounted turbines can spread larvacide in areas at risk for Zika transmission more efficiently than the previously-used handheld sprayers that had to be walked around neighborhoods.


Zika virus: Mosquitoes now spreading the disease near Miami's Little River neighborhood

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