Title: FIELD RESEARCH HAZARDS
1FIELD RESEARCH HAZARDS
2Charles Easterberg Public Health
Advisor Environmental Health Safety Lecturer,
Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences
3FIELD RESEARCH HAZARDS
- Rabies
- West Nile Virus
- Hantavirus
- Plague
- Ticks
- Stinging insects
- Waterborne Disease
- Foodborne Disease
- Toxic Plants
- Biting bugs
- Snakes
- Things that go bump in the night
4GOAL
- JES GIT YER DATA
- JES GIT DONE
- AND GIT HOME SAFELY!!
5Research Emergencies
- PREVENT THEM!
-
- First aid standard? mountaineering?
- Red Cross www.seattleredcross.org
- Seattle Mountaineers www.mountaineers.org
6Field Research Problem Groups
- Bad decisions
- Bad wheels
- Bad
- terrain
- geography
- weather
- Bad feed
- Bad water
- Bad animals bugs
- Bad plants
7Transportation
- Safe vehicle
- All-point safety inspection
- Well-rested drivers
- Current licenses
- Good maps
- No drinking, drugs
- Communication with home base
8WEATHER CLIMATE
- Hypothermia
- Heat exhaustion
- Heat stroke
- Lightning
9Geography Terrain
- Heat cold extremes
- Geologic features
- Abandoned mine shafts
- Quicksand
- Cliffs
- Avalanches
- Waves tides
10Quicksand
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12Collapsed Mine Vent Shaft
13BAD FEED
- Stomach flu (norovirus)
- Hepatitis A
- Spoilage
- Salmonella
- Campylobacter
- Etc., etc., etc.
14CAMP FOOD SAFETY
- Wash hands after pottying
- Wash hands before handling food utensils
- Keep perishable food hot (gt140) or cold (lt41)
- Cook foods to 165F
- Dont cross contaminate cooked foods with raw
foods/juices - Dont use leftover proteinaceous foods
- Prevent animal access (deer mice, bears)
15HEPATITIS A
TRANSMISSION Drinking untreated water
Unclean hands preparing food SYMPTOMS fatigue
fever cramps, nausea vomiting
chalky stools sometimes yellow skin
eyes ? Most people NEVER show symptoms but
CAN SPREAD virus
16HEPATITIS A PREVENTION
- Treat drinking water
- Wash hands after going potty
- Wash hands before handling food
- Avoid bare hand - food contact
- Get pre-exposure vaccination (2 shots)
- Get Ig shot if exposure suspected
17WATERBORNE DISEASES
- HEPATITIS A
- CRYPTOSPORIDIUM
- GIARDIA
- LEPTOSPIROSIS
- TYPHOID FEVER
- CHOLERA
18WATERBORNE PARASITES
- GIARDIA
- CRYPTOSPORIDIUM
- CYCLOSPORA
19WATERBORNE PARASITES
Reservoir wild animals, livestock,
humans Symptoms diarrhea, stomach cramps,
bloating, gas, fatigue nausea/vomiting.
Can last weeks to months. Onset 2-14 days
after ingestion
20PREVENTING WATERBORNE DISEASES
- Safe-source or treat all drinking water
- Boil
- Filter
- Add chemicals iodine, chlorine
- Wash fruit veggies in clean water
21WATER FILTERS AND PURIFIERS
- ACTIVATED CHARCOAL
- Eliminate organic chemicals
- PARTICULATE FILTERS
- Eliminate protozoa and bacteria
- PURIFIERS
- Eliminate viruses
? COMBINATION
22WATER FILTERS AND PURIFIERS
CONSIDERATIONS
- Level of elimination
- Output
- Weight
- Field Cleanable?
- Filter construction
- Cost
www.rei.com and www.backcountry-equipment.com are
informative sites with product specifications and
comparisons.
23VECTORBORNE DISEASES
24DEFINITIONS
ZOONOSIS a disease of animals (transmissible
to humans) VECTOR insect or animal capable of
transmitting a disease from any organism
to a human VEHICLE inanimate object which
transports disease organisms
25RESERVOIR
AGENT
VECTOR
DISEASE
26A GOOD VECTOR MUST
- harbor the agent
- ? spread the agent (is mobile)
- ? tolerate environmental extremes and survive
long enough to - ?Reproduce
- ?Disseminate agent
27RABIES
AGENT Rabies virus RESERVOIR MAMMALS (usually
bats) VECTOR suspect any mammal Washington
BATS NA raccoon, skunk, fox, bats Third World
all canids, esp. dogs any mammal
(monkeys)
28Bats are the only KNOWN rabies reservoir in
Washington State (today!)
29RABIES SPREAD
- found in rabid animals saliva
- spread to humans by animal
- bites
- scratches
- inhalation
- potential spread through mucous membrane contact
30RABIES SYMPTOMS
- Lethality 99.999
- 2 - 8 weeks (7 years) after exposure
- headache, fever, sometimes pain at bite site
- agitation, confusion
- difficulty swallowing fear of liquids
- discomfort from light, noise paralysis
- death within a few days to 1 week
31RABIES PREVENTION
Discuss plans with Travel Clinic and get
pre-exposure vaccination IF ? doing research on
potentially rabid animals, e.g., bats ? planning
to be more than 30 days in an area of the world
where rabies is endemic
32RABIES PREVENTION
- Also
- Minimize wild animal handling, especially bats
- Use PPE appropriate to animal in question
- Do not make wild animals pets
33RABIES PREVENTION
- Exclude bats from your living space
- If a bat found where people sleeping
- ? assume exposure
- ? seek prompt medical consultation
34RABIES PREVENTION
- IF BITTEN or SCRATCHED BY ANIMAL
- clean wound thoroughly with soap and water
- capture animal only if safely possible, AND
- contact a doctor and
- explain encounter with animal
- determine potential for rabies exposure
- determine need for treatment
- REPORT incident to UW official
35Deer mouse
36HANTAVIRUS
AGENT Sin Nombre virus 3 others DISEASE
Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) RESERVOIR ?
deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus) ?12-15 HV
positive in WA ? cotton rat in SE US VEHICLE
dust, urine crystals fecal material
37HANTAVIRUS EXPOSURE
- shed through deer mouse urine, saliva, and
droppings - can occur from breathing dust while
- cleaning rodent droppings anywhere
- living or working in mouse-infested places
- disturbing deer mouse nests
- stealing piñon nuts from mouse nests
38HANTAVIRUS SYMPTOMS
- Lethality 60
- Onset 1 3 weeks after exposure
- Symptoms flu-like
- Stage 1 fever, chills, severe muscle aches,
nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain - Stage 2 abrupt onset of respiratory distress
rapid breathing, gasping, drowning -
39HANTAVIRUS PREVENTION
- Exclude rodents from human spaces, tents!
- Remove food scraps and harborage from inside and
around your living area - Avoid contact with rodents ?
- Air out mousy structures before entry, AND
- Disinfect with 10 bleach water solution then
clean up
40Air out and disinfect structures before entering
and cleaning
41PLAGUE
Agent Yersinia pestis Disease Bubonic,
Septicemic, Pneumonic Reservoir burrowing
rodents rock and ground squirrels, prairie
dogs, black rats, etc. Vector FLEAS, esp.
oriental rat flea Vehicle respiratory droplets
from pets and humans with pneumonic plague
42Plague buboes
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45PLAGUE PREVENTION
- Avoid flea bites
- Repellents (DEET, permethrin)
- Protective clothing
- Notice fleas getting on you
- Be prepared to kill fleas
- Possible pre-trip vaccine (rare cases)
- Preventive antibiotic therapy
46CRITTERS
47AVOID
- All organisms with the following species names
- horribilis/horridum
- vexans/irritans
- infestans
- toxifolia/toxicodendron
- etc
48CARNIVORES
- BEARS
- Black (blond, too)
- Brown
- Grizzly
- Polar
- COUGARS
- CANIDS coyote, wolf, fox, hyena, dingo
- GATORS, CROCS
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50Black Bear
51BEARS
- Assume their presence
- AVOID encounters
- See it before it sees you
- Be alert for cubs
- Watch for odd plant movement
- Make noise to prevent surprises
52BEARS
- People food
- Dont smell like food!
- Avoid odorous foods
- Dont keep food in tent
- Wash face and hands after eating
- Hang food far away from tent
53BEARS
- Dont make eye contact
- Back away rapidly give it space
- Black dont play dead
- Grizzly play dead if no escape
54GRIZZLY BEAR
55MOUNTAIN LION (COUGAR)
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57MOUNTAIN LION
58KEEPIN FROM BEIN EATEN
- Same rules as for bears EXCEPT
- FACE them dont run
- Speak forcefully
- Make it clear YOU are the boss
- Look as large as possible
- Advance on them if necessary
59CROCODILE
60SKUNKS (pole-, phoby-cats)
61VENOMOUS CRITTERS
- Snakes rattlers, coral, copperhead, water
moccasin - Yellow jackets, hornets, wasps
- Killer bees
- Scorpions
- Spiders
62WESTERN RATTLESNAKE
63COPPERHEAD
64WESTERN MILK SNAKERed and black, friend of Jack
65WESTERN CORAL SNAKERed and yellow, poisonous
fellow
66Water Moccasin (cottonmouth)
67Cottonmouth Swimming
68JELLYFISH
69Box Jellyfish
70BAD BUGS
- MOSQUITOES
- VENOMOUS INSECTS
- TICKS
- FLEAS
- FLIES
71MOSQUITO
72MOSQUITO
- Vector for
- Malaria
- Yellow fever
- West Nile Virus
- Several encephalitides
- Dengue fever
73West Nile Virus
- Reservoir any bird horses, others
- Vector MOSQUITO spp.
- Inhalation sprayed droplets
- Cuts, punctures
- Bird specimens, etc.
74West Nile Virus Activity 2008
75West Nile Virus Prevention
- Avoid mosquito-infested areas ?
- Liberal use of repellents with DEET or
picaridin - Keep mosquitoes out of sleeping space
- Wear anti-mosquito clothing
- Avoid mosquito feeding times
- Avoid cuts and punctures
76Watch what you eat!
77Bees killer or honeybees?
78KILLER BEES
- Vigorously attack intruders swarm them
792009 Killer Bee Range-West
802009 Killer Bee Range-East
81Sting Prevention
- Enquire locally of bees presence
- Be aware of insect activity around you
- Watch for flight paths to/from nests
- Wear light-colored clothing
- Avoid shiny jewelry
- Avoid citrus and floral-smelling perfumes
- Cover head and face when escaping
- Dont try escape under water
82Fire Ant
83Fire Ant Mounds
84Fire Ant Quarantine
85FIRE ANT STINGS
86Fire Ant Stings
87TICKBORNE DISEASES
- Lyme disease
- Tularemia (rabbit fever)
- Relapsing fever
- Rocky Mountain spotted fever
- Ehrlichiosis, babesiosis, etc.
- THE OTHERSsame way
88Brown Dog Tick
89- Hard tick on grass blade
- Typical behavior of hard tick waiting for
host
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91LYME DISEASE
AGENT spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi RESERVOIR
wild rodents (deer mouse all squirrels
prairie dogs other burrowing rodents)
deer VECTOR NYMPHAL Ixodes spp. deer
tick very tiny ?
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93LYME DISEASE RISK
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97LYME DISEASE SYMPTOMS
- Early symptoms
- Appear within 5 to 30 days of tick bite
- Bulls eye expanding rash may appear a few days
to several weeks after bite - Fatigue
- Fever and chills
- Migratory muscle and joint pain
98LYME DISEASE SYMPTOMS
- Later symptoms
- appear months or years after initial infection
- arthritis, pain and swelling especially in the
knees - nervous system abnormalities
partial facial paralysis - meningitis
- irregular heartbeat
99LYME DISEASE PREVENTION
- tick control remove brush, tall grass, leaves
around houses, yards and tents - protect yourself from tick bites
- long, light-colored clothing
- tuck pant legs into socks
- avoid contact with tall grass and brush
- use tick repellent
- detect, remove ticks rapidly
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101TULAREMIA (Rabbit Fever)
- Agent bacterium Francisella tularensis
- Vector tick, deerfly, mosquito
- Symptoms
- characteristic ulcer at infection site
- swollen lymph glands
- severe fever and flu-like symptoms
102Deer Fly
103TULAREMIA (Rabbit Fever)
Ulcer at the site of infection
104TULAREMIA (Rabbit Fever)
Tick bite infected with tularemia
105TULAREMIA PREVENTION
- Dont let ticks embed on you
- Remove ticks promptly
- Protect skin from deer flies
- Wear gloves when skinning or handling rabbits
- Cook meat of wild rodents and rabbits thoroughly
106 RELAPSING FEVER
- Ornithodoros ticks (soft)
- Bite lt 1 hour
- painless
- unnoticed
- Dont sleep in rodent-infested places
- Avoid old cabins, caves, crawl spaces
107OTHER ARACHNIDS
- Black widow spider
- Hobo spider
- Brown recluse spider
- Scorpions
108BLACK WIDOW
109Hobo Spider (funnel web)
110BROWN RECLUSE Fiddleback
111Brown Reclose Spider Range
112Centruroides Scorpions
113WILD PLANTS
DONT EAT THEM!!
114TOXIC PLANTS (INGESTION)
- DONT EAT
- Fungi tode-stuhl death seat
- Water hemlock
- Unknowns
115There are old mushroom hunters, And there are
bold mushroom hunters, but There are no old, bold
mushroom hunters. -Anonymous
116WATER HEMLOCK (food lookalike)
- Most toxic indigenous NA plant
- Looks like turnip, smells like parsnip sweet
- Common names
- poison parsnip, false parsnip, death-of-man,
childrens bane, beaver poison - Cicutoxin (neurotoxin)
117WATER HEMLOCK
118TOXIC PLANTS (CONTACT)
- DONT TOUCH (urushiol toxin)
- Poison ivy
- Poison oak
- Poison sumac
- Florida poisontree
-
119TOXIC PLANTS
- Prevent exposure
- Recognize and avoid plant
- Know plants habitats
- Wear protective clothing
- Apply protective ointment to exposed skin
- Clean skin clothes thoroughly after exposure
120POISON OAK
POISON IVY
POISON SUMAC
121POISON IVY
- Virtually nationwide
- 3-leaf groups varying seasonally from dark
green to red-brown - white berries
- Tiny plant to massive tree-climbing vine
- ALL PARTS of plant toxic (forever ?)
122POISON IVY (SPRING)
123POISON IVY
124POISON IVY
125POISON OAK
- Western states
- Seward Park
- S. end Bainbridge Island (Fort Ward SP)
- Klickitat county E Washington
- Oak-shape 3-leaf groups dark green to red-brown
seasonally - white, waxy berries
- SIZE tiny plant to large shrub, bush
- ALL PARTS of plant toxic (forever ?)
126POISON OAK
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131POISON SUMAC
- Eastern North America
- Habitat limited to swamps, bogs, wet areas
- Compound leaves 7-11 leaflets
- Same problems as the ivies
132POISON SUMAC
133FLORIDA POISONTREE
- Range south peninsular Florida Keys
- Compound leaves
- Drier habitat than poison sumac
- May grow on hammocks as well
- Same precautions as the others
134Florida Poisontree
135PREVENTION
- Recognize and avoid
- Clothing
- IVYBLOCK pre-exposure
- Immediate alcohol wash
- Soap and water wash
- ZANFEL post-exposure
136MORE IRRITANT PLANTS
- Devils club (Oplopanax horridum) all parts full
of breakaway spines NW forests - Stinging nettle grows in clusters shady places,
forests - Giant hogweed up to 4 meters high
137Devils Club
138Giant Hogweed
139Helpful Websites
- National Park Service
- www.nature.nps.gov/hazards
- safety/index.cfm
- Seattle Mountaineers
- www.mountaineers.org
140Informative Website
www.enature.com Regional guides highlight
dangerous and poisonous plants and animals.
As with all web information, do not accept
blindly.
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142QUESTIONS?