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			The Logan County Department of Public Health would like to remind 
			everyone to continue taking precautions to eliminate breeding areas 
			around your home and to avoid mosquito bites. Precautions to prevent 
			mosquitoes include: 
				
				
				Avoid being outdoors when mosquitoes are most active, especially 
				between dusk and dawn. Use prevention methods whenever 
				mosquitoes are present.
				When 
				outdoors, wear shoes and socks, long pants and a long-sleeved 
				shirt, and apply insect repellent that includes DEET, picaridin 
				or oil of lemon eucalyptus according to label instructions. 
				Contact a physician before using repellents on infants. 
				Make 
				sure doors and windows have tight-fitting screens. Repair or 
				replace screens that might have tears or other openings. Try to 
				keep doors and windows shut, especially at night.  
			 
				
				
				Eliminate all sources of standing water that can support 
				mosquito breeding, including water in bird baths, ponds, 
				flowerpots, wading pools, old tires and other receptacles. In 
				Logan County, contact the Logan County Department of Public 
				Health to report areas of stagnant water in roadside ditches, 
				flooded yards and similar locations that may produce mosquitoes.
				 
			
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			If you are bitten by a mosquito, there is no reason to be tested for 
			WNV since illnesses related to mosquito bites are rare. However, if 
			you develop symptoms such as high fever, confusion, muscle weakness 
			or severe headaches, you should see your doctor.  
			The Health Department will continue to monitor for mosquito activity 
			through October 15th. Monitoring includes the collection and 
			submittal of dead birds to the Illinois State Laboratory for West 
			Nile Virus testing. The Logan County Department of Public Health 
			would appreciate your help. If you observe a dead or dying bird, 
			please contact the Department to see if the bird is eligible for 
			testing. Eligible birds must meet various conditions and can include 
			crows, blue jays, robins and other perching birds which appear to 
			have died of natural causes within the previous 24 hours. 
 If questions, you can contact the Logan County Department of Public 
			Health at 217-735-2317. For further information regarding 
			mosquito-related disease prevention, health tips and other health 
			department services, you can log onto their website at WWW.LCDPH.ORG.
 
				 
			[Don Cavi, MS, LEHPPublic Health Administrator
 Logan County Department of Public Health]
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