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British Columbia

High-risk areas for ticks in B.C. highlighted in new online map

The B.C. Centre for Disease Control has released an interactive tool where people can find out if where they are in the province is a danger zone for disease-carrying ticks.

As weather warms, risk grows of bites and possible infection with bacteria that causes Lyme disease

An adult blacklegged tick.
An adult black-legged tick, which can carry the bacteria that causes Lyme disease. (Bertrand Guay/AFP/Getty Images)

It's the season to start being cautious about ticks and Lyme disease, and this year the B.C. Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC) has launched an interactive map to help people assess their risk of being bitten.

As the weather warms and people start trekking more into tick territory, the public health arm of the provincial government has created a map where users can enter their address and find out if they are in a high-risk area for encountering an infected insect.

The map, whichis now available online, currently shows people are at greatest risk on the South Coast and in the valleys of the southern Interior.

Lyme disease is caused by the bacteriaBorrelia burgdorferiand in British Columbia thewestern black-legged tickIxodes pacificusposes the biggest threat of carrying it.The greatest risk of tick bite occurs during the spring and summer.

Janet Sperling, president of the Canadian Lyme Disease Foundation, says the map is a wake-up call, especially for people whothought the risk was lowerthan elsewhere in the country.

"It really brings home the fact that there is a risk of Lyme disease across B.C," said Sperling.

A screenshot of the online map launched by the B.C. Centre for Disease Control shows where the risk of Lyme Disease is highest in the province. (B.C Centre for Disease Control)

Ticks live in tall grass and forested areas and latch onto people or animals as they pass by. They burrow part way into the skin, bite, draw blood, and then drop off.

According to Thompson Rivers University professor Rob Higgins,an entomologist who studies ticks, less than one per cent of western black-legged ticks collected in B.C. and tested by experts were infected with the bacterium that causes Lyme disease.

But Higgins saidabout 12 to 15 new cases of Lyme disease are reported in B.C. every year and, of these, the majority are contracted on the coast.

"So while there's the potential for contracting Lyme in the Interior and it has occurred it doesn't occur very often," he said Thursday during an interview on CBC'sDaybreak South.

If left untreated, Lyme disease can lead to serious complications such as arthritis, joint pain and cognitive issues, the BCCDC says.

Higgins says anyone in any area considered risky should always check for ticks after being outside and take protective measures before heading out.

For people hiking in tall grass or wooded areas, the first step in dealing with ticks is prevention:

Experts say it takes time for a tick to transmit Lyme disease to a human and there is little risk if you catch and remove the offender right away. Higgins says it can take up to 2 days of a tick living on a person before there is a notable risk of disease, so checking after being outsideis critical and effective.

According to the BCCDC, if you find a tick it is important toremove all of it including the mouth parts that could beburied in your skin. It warns people never to squeeze an attached tick's body, which could force its stomach contents into the wound and increase the risk of infection.

Removal should be done with tweezers. Once the tick is gone, the bite area should be cleaned with soap and water and then disinfected with antiseptic cream.

Ticks found by B.C. residents can be identified for free by submitting a photo to www.etick.ca.

If you have been bitten by a tick or were in a high risk areaandare suffering from a rash where you know you werebittenor experiencing a fever, headache, fatigue, muscle paralysis or joint pain,see a health-care provider immediately, the BCCDC says.

With files from Daybreak South