In #Arizona, a fight against a deadly #fungus is under threat from #Trump’s health policies

What one doctor’s quest to stop #ValleyFever says about America’s preparedness for climate-driven disease.

by Zoya Teirstein, October 2, 2025

Excerpt: "Valley fever is endemic to southern #WashingtonState, #Oregon, #California, #Nevada, #Utah, #NewMexico, #Texas, and parts of #CentralAmerica and #SouthAmerica, but nowhere are cases of the disease more common than in Arizona. After Arizona started mandatory laboratory reporting for valley fever in 1997, registered cases ticked up and down. But the number began trending upward dramatically in 2016. Then, in 2024, cases in the state exploded, hitting their second-highest total ever. More than 15,000 infections were reported — a 37 percent increase over 2023. California, which runs just behind Arizona in its annual valley fever caseload, registered a record-breaking 12,637 cases in 2024, representing a 39 percent increase over the previous year, which had already smashed a record set in 2019.

"Some portion of the rise in reported cases represents growing awareness among physicians and an associated surge in testing. The pace of new construction in #UntouchedAreas also plays a role.

"But the recent increase in cases has been so dramatic, Galgiani and other researchers across the West who study the fungus think another factor may be driving the trend: #supersoaker winter #monsoons followed by scorching summer #heat and #drought, a cycle made more intense by #ClimateChange.

"Because warmer air holds more moisture, monsoons and other major rainfall events pull in larger quantities of water vapor and produce heavier downpours as the planet warms. This physical fact has fueled a spate of #MonsterFloods across the U.S. and around the world in recent years. But the same warmth can conversely lead to drought by making the atmosphere 'thirstier,' or capable of absorbing more water from the land’s surface. Both conditions facilitate the spread of valley fever — the wetter conditions by encouraging growth of the #spores, and the drier by facilitating desiccation and soil disturbance.

" 'The main driver for us is certainly this very clear association for #coccidioides between heavy precipitation cycles followed by drought,' said George Thompson, a professor of medicine at the University of California, Davis, School of Medicine who specializes in #FungalDiseases.

"And it’s not just valley fever that may increase its spread thanks to climate change. Peer reviewed research shows that fungal threats of all kinds are poised to emerge and thrive in a warming world."

https://grist.org/health/valley-fever-arizona-fungus-climate-change/?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us

#ExtremeWeather #ClimateCrisis #Disease

In Arizona, a fight against a deadly fungus is under threat from Trump’s health policies

What one Arizona doctor’s quest to stop valley fever says about America’s preparedness for climate-driven disease.

Grist

#Superbugs #Coccidioides

From CNN.com: The next superbug threat is already here. It’s going to be even harder to overcome

https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/06/health/fungal-superbug-threat-wellness?cid=ios_app

The next superbug threat is already here. It’s going to be even harder to overcome

Molds and yeast on human bodies and in the air are becoming increasingly resistant to treatment. Experts say the microbes are fueling the next superbug crisis.

CNN
Coccidioides is a fungal #pathogen that forms a unique structure, the spherule. This transcriptomic study of #Coccidioides development reveals spherule-specific gene regulation, Ryp1-dependent virulence factors, and potential #antifungal therapeutic targets @PLOSBiology https://plos.io/4cINMpl
Transcriptomic atlas throughout Coccidioides development reveals key phase-enriched transcripts of this important fungal pathogen

Coccidioides is a neglected fungal pathogen that forms a unique structure, the spherule, to cause disease. This study provides the first high-density transcriptomic analysis of Coccidioides development, showing spherule-specific gene regulation, Ryp1-dependent virulence factors, and potential targets of antifungal therapy.

Clickbait headline. “Spread” implies contagion but body of article: “This infection, primarily found in Arizona and California, is not contagious, meaning it cannot be transmitted from person to person, health officials said.” #ValleyFever #coccidioides #coccidioidomycosis #fungi

From: @glnews_mirror
https://mastodon.hongkongers.net/@glnews_mirror/112881863321166638

Global News (@[email protected])

Attached: 1 image Dangerous fungus spreads at popular California music festival California health officials are warning that thousands who attended a popular outdoor music festival may have been exposed to a dangerous and potentially deadly fungus. #globalnews #Health #Lifestyle #World #LightninginaBottlefestival https://globalnews.ca/news/10658795/fungus-california-music-festival-valley-fever-lightning-in-a-bottle/

香港萬象 hkers.social
Why a potentially deadly fungus from the American southwest is creeping closer to Canada

A fungus that lurks in desert soil makes thousands of Americans sick every year with a condition known as Valley Fever. Thanks to climate change, it’s spreading north.

Impact and Control of Valley Fever: Proceedings of a Workshop–in Brief
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2023. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/26928 #Coccidioides #ValleyFever #fungi #ThinkFungus
Impact and Control of Valley Fever: Proceedings of a Workshop–in Brief

Download a PDF of "Impact and Control of Valley Fever" by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine for free.

The National Academies Press
Fungi That Cause Lung Infections May Be Spreading Across the U.S.

Doctors are likely to misdiagnose cases due to outdated maps of these fungi’s ranges

Smithsonian Magazine

Wow 🤩🤯

We now have a rupturing #Coccidioides  spherule emoji  

@nick you continue to outdo yourself!
#ValleyFever #Coccidioidomycosis #Mycology @MSG_ERC