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Wisconsin Lyme Network Puts Billboards up Across the State!

July 1, 2021 By Sherry Sievewright Leave a Comment

Wisconsin Lyme Billboards are up, sponsored by the Wisconsin Lyme Network.  Here are the locations:. Let us know if you see them, send us pictures!

1.) Appleton Ave southside 700 ft. east of Bobolink Ave (facing west)

2.) Hwy 100 southside 90 ft east of 92nd st (facing east)

3.)  Layton Avenue northside 650 ft east of 13th St (facing east)

4.) Oklahoma Ave northside 120 ft east of 6th St (facing east)

5.) I-94 northside 0.55 miles east of Hwy F (facing east)

 

Filed Under: In The News

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About Wisconsin Lyme Network

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Wisconsin Lyme Network is a statewide nonprofit organization whose mission is to raise awareness, provide education and support, and promote research for vector-borne illnesses to the patients, medical community and the general population in Wisconsin.

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1 month ago
Florida Lyme Disease Association

‘Very aggressive tick,’ whose bite causes red meat allergies not a hoax, CDC says

The actual ailment is galactose-alpha, or alpha-gal. It's transmitted by the Lone Star tick, or amblyomma americanum, which the CDC says is widely distributed in the Southeastern and Eastern United States.

https://www.daytondailynews.com/news/national/very-aggressive-tick-whose-bite-causes-red-meat-allergies-not-hoax-cdc-says/XZydNwpnu9YoVp1D4JMXDP/

FLDA/LDC Note: There is conflicting research as to whether lone star ticks transmit Bbss (Lyme disease) or other borrelia strains. Studies not confirming Bb in lone star ticks did not follow the same procedure and techniques as those where Bb was found.

While the CDC recognizes "STARI", they downplay the symptoms, even when southern patients are debilitated. Also, there is no test for STARI and no recommended treatment, which means patients are simply left to suffer.

See:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4893544/

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3675506/

Lone star ticks also transmit ehrlichia, tularemia, Rickettsia amblyommii, and Q fever.
... See more

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