First West Nile-Positive Mosquitoes Found
2026-06-13
Silence in test tubes can be deceptive, health officials warn, even when human results stay negative. Pools of mosquitoes collected in Chicago have now tested positive for West Nile virus according to the city’s Department of Public Health, marking the first detection of the season and signaling that the local transmission cycle between birds and mosquitoes is active.

The real concern, experts argue, is not panic but complacency, because infection typically spreads through a simple, preventable event: a mosquito bite. West Nile virus is transmitted when infected Culex mosquitoes feed on humans, and while many infections remain asymptomatic, some progress to neuroinvasive disease, including encephalitis and meningitis, through viral penetration of the central nervous system and disruption of the blood-brain barrier.
Public guidance now leans on personal behavior rather than dramatic new technology, and that choice is deliberate. Health authorities emphasize insect repellent containing DEET or picaridin, elimination of standing water that supports larval development, and use of window screens and protective clothing during peak mosquito activity. With no human cases confirmed by the department, officials frame this early signal as a chance to interrupt transmission before severe illness appears.
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