There are about seven cases of the plague in
the United States every year.
Author: VERIFY, Jason Puckett (TEGNA), David Tregde, Terry
Spry Jr. Published: 5:21 PM DT July 6,
2020 Updated: 5:21 PM CDT July 6, 2020
News outlets reported over the weekend that a
city in China had issued a warning after finding a suspected case of bubonic
plague. That news spread across social media as people saw it as the next 2020
disaster.
And while the news is true, fears that we
could be in for another black death are unwarranted. That’s because the bubonic
plague isn’t quite the same level of threat today as it was in the 1300s.
THE QUESTION
Were cases of the bubonic plague actually
found in China, and how serious is this?
THE ANSWER
Chinese medical sources did report a diagnosis
of bubonic plague on July 5, 2020.
While the plague can be serious, medical
improvements have made it a treatable sickness in most instances.
WHAT WE FOUND
The bubonic plague, according to the CDC, is
one of three types of plague. While they say the plague can still be fatal
despite effective antibiotics, the mortality rate is much lower for cases of
the bubonic plague than other forms of plague.
For pneumonic plague, when the plague gets
into the respiratory system, it is the only kind of plague that transmits from
person-to-person. Untreated bubonic plague can spread to other parts of the
body and become pneumonic plague, the CDC says.
There are an average of seven plague cases in
the United States a year, the CDC says. Over 80% of those cases are of the
bubonic form. A separate CDC page shows a map of American plague cases since
1970. All but one of those cases originated in the western United States.
That CDC page also shows a map of where the
plague exists around the globe. The United States is one of 11 countries marked
on this map, which also marks China and Mongolia where the most recent cases
have been discovered. The map’s largest markers are the Democratic Republic of
the Congo, Madagascar and Peru, which are countries where the World Health
Organization considers the plague to be endemic.
The WHO says the case-fatality ratio of
bubonic plague is 30% to 60% while the CDC gives a fatality rate as low as
eight percent to 10%. Regardless, the disease is still very serious, but the
WHO emphasizes antibiotic treatment is effective and that early diagnosis and
treatment can save lives.
All of that is to say that it’s not
necessarily unusual for cases of plague to be discovered around the world, even
in the United States, each year. It’s still a dangerous disease that should be
taken seriously, but there are generally few cases worldwide each year.
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