sábado, 16 de julio de 2016

Harmful Algal Blooms | Features | CDC

Harmful Algal Blooms | Features | CDC

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC twenty four seven. Saving Lives, Protecting People



Harmful Algal Blooms

Harmful algal bloom in a lake

Photo credit: New York State Department of Health



Harmful algal blooms can produce toxins that are dangerous to people, animals, and the environment. Learn what harmful algal blooms are, how you and your pets can avoid them, and what CDC is doing to protect the public’s health.
Warm weather brings many happy occasions: picnics, ballgames, and back yard fun. It also is a time when microscopic plant-like organisms – algae and cyanobacteria – are more likely to overgrow in rivers, lakes, and oceans.
These overgrowths, called algal blooms, occur across the country. Sometimes they are just eyesores – an unpleasant scum or mats of green, red, blue, or brown organisms in the water that look or smell bad. Sometimes they also cause harm to people, animals, and the environment. In this case, they are known as harmful algal blooms. But you can't tell if a bloom is harmful just by looking at it.
Harmful algal blooms can produce toxins that can make people and animals sick. They also can block sunlight or use up a lot of oxygen in a body of water, which kills fish and plants in the water. Harmful algal bloom toxins have caused the shutdown of the water supply in a major U.S. city, killed wildlife and pets, and sickened hundreds of people with a variety of skin, breathing, neurological, and stomach symptoms.
People and animals can be exposed to algal toxins in many ways:
  • Swimming or coming in direct contact with the toxins
  • Breathing in the toxins
  • Swallowing contaminated water that contains toxins
  • Eating seafood contaminated with toxins
Animals can often be the first affected because they are more likely to swim or drink from bodies of water that contain algal blooms.
Harmful algal blooms have occurred in every region of the United States. In 2014, 38 states responded to a survey about harmful algal blooms, and more than half reported that such blooms occur every year in a freshwater body. All coastal states have reported harmful algal blooms in marine waters, and these blooms have also been reported in all of the Great Lakes. Evidence suggests that harmful algal blooms are increasing in number and severity because of climate change, farming practices, and storm and wastewater runoff.

Collecting Data to Protect Health

 OH HABS logoBecause harmful algal blooms affect people, animals, and the environment, it's important to document when they happen, where they happen, and whether they cause illness. CDC recently launched the One Health Harmful Algal Bloom System (OHHABS). State and territorial public health departments and their designated environmental health or animal health partners can use this voluntary system to report harmful algal bloom events and associated illnesses in people and animals. The data collected will help CDC and partners learn more about these blooms and understand how to best prevent the illnesses they cause. 
Harmful algal blooms are an example of a One Health issue. The One Health approach recognizes that human, animal, and environmental health are connected. Using this approach to track harmful blooms highlights the opportunity for human health, animal health, and environmental health experts to work together to effectively address the problems that harmful algal blooms can cause.
Harmful algal bloom in Chain Lake. Photo credit: Washington State Department of Health.

Tips for You and Your Pets to Stay Healthy

You can't tell if an algal bloom is harmful just by looking at it. Also, not all blooms are easy to see—toxins can be present even when you can't see the bloom. To protect yourself and your pets, avoid entering or playing in bodies of water that:
  • Smell bad
  • Look discolored
  • Have foam, scum, or algal mats on the surface
  • Contain or are near dead fish or other dead animals (for example, don't go in a body of water if dead fish have washed up on the shore or beach).
Check for beach advisories in your state that may be posted online or on signs near the water. Follow local or state guidance if you learn about a harmful algal bloom in a local water body or if you are notified that your tap water contains algal toxins. Know the health risks of eating contaminated fish and shellfish and follow advisories.
If you think you or your pet have become ill from exposure to a harmful algal bloom, see your healthcare provider or veterinarian. Animals can get very sick, so don't delay contacting your veterinarian if you think your pet has been exposed. If you have immediate questions about symptoms that you are experiencing, your local or state poison information center might be able to provide information.
CDC recently launched a new website to help the public and public health professionals learn more about harmful algal blooms. The website contains information about what these blooms are, how people and animals can get sick from them, and how to reduce the chance that you, your family, or your pets will get sick. It also includes resources to help partners get the word out about the effects of harmful blooms on people, animals, and the environment.

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