Minnesota
Are mosquito-borne diseases becoming more common in Minnesota?
MINNEAPOLIS — Whether you’ve been eaten alive or spared this summer, health officials say don’t let your guard when it comes to mosquitoes just yet.
Minnesota Department of Health epidemiologist supervisor Elizabeth Schiffman says mosquito-borne diseases peak at the end of summer into early fall when there is a larger mosquito population and they’ve had more time to circulate viruses.
“I don’t think it’s something where want people to panic about of course, but definitely knowing that the risk is there and this time of year is definitely the highest risk time,” Schiffman said.
In Minnesota, six mosquito-borne diseases are on the radar of health officials: West Nile virus, La Crosse encephalitis, Jamestown Canyon virus, Western equine encephalitis, Eastern equine encephalitis and St. Louis encephalitis The most common is the West Nile virus.
“We see cases every year, but some years we have a lot of activity and some years not so much,” Schiffman said.
Most who get infected have no symptoms but for some, the West Nile virus can be severe or deadly.
“It’s actually the most serious of the mosquito-borne diseases that we have in the United States,” Schiffman said.
West Nile virus can cause flu-like symptoms and is deadly for about one-third of people who develop it. While EEE has been found in Wisconsin, no human cases have been reported in Minnesota.
“We in Minnesota are in the western edge of the range for that virus, but we have mosquitoes that can spread it. But we just don’t see a lot of activity with it here,” Schiffman said.
Schiffman says a warming climate could mean a longer mosquito season and a greater spread of disease.
“Things are changing and viruses are changing,” she said. “People move so it’s very possible. You know, West Nile virus wasn’t a virus we had in the United States 25 years ago.”
The best way to protect yourself is prevention.
The threat typically diminishes by the end of the month or early October. The first hard frost will get rid of the mosquitoes, too.
Minnesota
Week begins with warm-up, quiet conditions in Minnesota
After a frigid weekend, Monday will bring warmer temperatures across Minnesota.
In the Twin Cities, highs will climb into the mid-20s under brighter skies. Temperatures will continue rising on Tuesday, briefly reaching the upper 30s.
A weak system Tuesday night will cool things slightly, but conditions will stay quiet. Wednesday mostly stays mild, but a mix of rain and snow may develop late and continue into Thursday.
Cooler, more seasonable air returns heading into next weekend.
Minnesota
Hughes scores in debut for Wild, who defeat Bruins for 4th straight win | NHL.com
The 26-year-old defenseman finished with three shots in 26:55 of ice time in his first game since being traded to Minnesota by the Vancouver Canucks on Friday for defenseman Zeev Buium, forwards Marco Rossi and Liam Ohgren, and a first-round pick in the 2026 NHL Draft.
“It’s been a whirlwind for sure,” Hughes said. “I’m just looking forward to kind of getting my feet on the ground and get with the team here and get in a day-to-day lifestyle here. But definitely the last 48 hours have been a lot, but I was excited to go play the game.”
Kirill Kaprizov had two goals and an assist, Hartman had a goal and two assists, and Matt Boldy had a goal and an assist for the Wild (19-9-5), who extended their winning streak to four games and home point streak to 12 games (10-0-2). Filip Gustavsson made 29 saves.
“The crowd was electric I think just from the … I would say warmups to the introduction and then throughout the game,” Minnesota coach John Hynes said. “So, it was great to see the building like that and the guys perform the way that they did. So, it was a great combo.”
Alex Steeves and Andrew Peeke scored, and Swayman made 25 saves for the Bruins (19-14-0), who had won four straight.
“They’re a very good hockey team,” Boston coach Marco Sturm said. “They’re built pretty big, they play the right way, they play pretty hard, and they go to the net really hard, too. So, that’s something I mentioned, even between periods. That’s something we have to learn. And even if teams like that, we have to learn from that, and that shows we’re not there yet, and that’s a good thing, I think.
“Do we like the end results? No, but we had our chances in the first, even in the second period, and those are the chances that you have to use, otherwise it’s going to get hard against a team like that.”
Jared Spurgeon put Minnesota ahead 1-0 at 10:11 of the first period with a wrist shot through traffic as Swayman was screened by Marcus Johansson on a power play.
Minnesota
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