Animal Disease Information - West Nile Virus
Iowa State University. Center for Food Security and Public Health.
Iowa State University. Center for Food Security and Public Health.
North Dakota Department of Agriculture.
California Department of Health Services; California Department of Food and Agriculture; Mosquito and Vector Control Association of California; California Vectorborne Disease Surveillance System.
Cornell University. Cornell Wildlife Health Lab.
University of Pennsylvania. School of Veterinary Medicine. Wildlife Futures Program.
See also: Disease Fact Sheets created for use by wildlife biologists, researchers, and the public
King County Public Health (Washington).
DHHS. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
Cleveland Clinic.
Hawaii State Department of Health. Disease Outbreak Control Division.
UN. World Health Organization.
IUCN. Species Survival Commission. Invasive Species Specialist Group.
Google.
New York City Department of Health.
Columbia University. Center for Environmental Research and Conservation.
CAB International.
State of Michigan.
New York State Department of Health.
DHHS. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Provides links and resources for State Health Departments, many of which have information about Zika virus and West Nile virus with specific state information.
DOI. USGS. National Wildlife Health Center.
DHHS. CDC. Division of Vector-Borne Diseases (DVBD).
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services released the National Public Health Strategy to Prevent and Control Vector-Borne Diseases in People (VBD National Strategy). As directed by the 2019 Kay Hagan Tick Act—named after the U.S. Senator who died due to complications from a tickborne illness—HHS led a four-year process with civilian agencies and defense departments to deliver this strategy. Co-led by the HHS Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the strategy identifies and describes federal priorities to detect, prevent, respond to, and control diseases and conditions caused by vectors in the United States. This VBD National Strategy represents the largest formal federal coordination effort focused on vector-borne disease prevention and control with contributions by over 50 representatives across 17 federal agencies.
See also: U.S. Health and Human Services Press Release on VBD National Strategy (Feb 6, 2024)