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West Nile Virus Economic Impact, Louisiana, 2002
Journal article   Peer reviewed

West Nile Virus Economic Impact, Louisiana, 2002

Armineh Zohrabian, Martin I. Meltzer, Raoult Ratard, Kaafee Billah, Noelle A. Molinari, Kakoli Roy, R. Douglas Scott and Lyle R. Petersen
Emerging infectious diseases, Vol.10(10), pp.1736-1744
10-01-2004
PMID: 15504258

Abstract

West Nile virus (WNV) is transmitted by mosquitoes and can cause illness in humans ranging from mild fever to encephalitis. In 2002, a total of 4,156 WNV cases were reported in the United States; 329 were in Louisiana. To estimate the economic impact of the 2002 WNV epidemic in Louisiana, we collected data from hospitals, a patient questionnaire, and public offices. Hospital charges were converted to economic costs by using Medicare cost-to-charge ratios. The estimated cost of the Louisiana epidemic was $20.1 million from June 2002 to February 2003, including a $10.9 million cost of illness ($4.4 million medical and $6.5 million nonmedical costs) and a $9.2 million cost of public health response. These data indicate a substantial short-term cost of the WNV disease epidemic in Louisiana.
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