19
Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University System Project Coordinator: Michael Merchant 17360 Coit Road, Dallas, TX 75252-6599 972-231-5362

Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Fire Ants and Texas Nursing HomesStaff roles and responsibilities

The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project

Texas Cooperative Extension

Texas A&M University SystemProject Coordinator: Michael Merchant

17360 Coit Road, Dallas, TX 75252-6599

972-231-5362

Page 2: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Red Imported Fire Ant

Page 3: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Fire ant workers

• Vary in size – (2-5 mm, 1/16-3/16

inch)

• Most of the colony consists of female workers– Defend the colony– collect food– care for queen and

brood

Page 4: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Fire ant stings

• 80% of Texans have been stung by fire ants

• Stings produce severe burning and itching at site

• Can also cause allergic response

image by Matt Yoder

Page 5: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

The Sting

Page 6: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Fire ant mounds

Page 7: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Fire Ants

• Respond quickly to nest disturbance

• Live in large “colonies”– 100,000 to

500,000 workers

Ph

oto

gra

ph

co

urt

esy

US

DA

, S

cott

Ba

ue

r

Page 8: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

How do fire ants find food?

• Workers forage randomly from nest

• Successful workers recruit others to food or water source

• Rapid recruitment within minutes

Page 9: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Ant foraging trails

• Ant that finds food lays down odor trail when traveling to nest

• Other ants follow trail and reinforce it

• Removing trails with common cleaners disrupts attachment to food source

Page 10: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

How fire ants enter buildings

Page 11: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

What to look for• Outdoor mounds• Live or dead ants• Soil and debris in

resident rooms• Cracks and

openings• Risky conditions

– food– spillage– soiled linens,

clothing

Look for soil, debris or ants along walls and baseboards

Look for outdoor mounds within 100 feet of buildings

Page 12: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Who’s at risk?

• Mobility-, sensory- or communication-impaired residents

• Bedfast residents (6% of nursing home residents nationally)

• ADL dependent residents (estimated 3,375 Texas nursing home residents)

• Catheterized residents (6.5% nationally)

ww

w.c

lark

son

.ed

u

Page 13: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

Consequences of not addressing fire ant problems• Increased risk to

residents• Increased liability for

facility*– failure to provide a

clean and safe environment free of pests and rodents

– failure to have written policies and procedures to prohibit…neglect and abuse of residents

*42 CFR §483.70 (h)(4) [TAG f469], and 42 CFR §483.13 (c) [TAG f224], respectively

Page 14: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University
Page 15: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

National Conference Urban Entomology, May 2006

Michael Merchant, Texas A&M Univ. Research Center, Dallas [email protected]

Documented fire ant stinging cases in long-term care facilitiesDate Location Victim Citation

1991 Abilene,TX 2 deaths, one survivor Drees (1995)

1992 Houston, TX Elderly female, delayed death Drees (1995)

unrecorded FL 74 yr old female, no reported consequences deShazo and Banks (1994)

Unrecorded TX 90 y female, death 6 days later deShazo and Williams (1995)

8-17-1998 Houston, TX Elderly male stung 2000+ times, recovered. Houston Chronicle 4-8-2003

8-30-1998 Brookhaven, MS 67 y female, 500+ stings, died 5 days later deShazo et al (1999)

2-15-1997 Starkville, MS 60 y male, confluent areas of stings on head, back, arms, chest, d 16 month later

deShazo et al (1999)

7-1-1998 Flower Mound, TX 89 y female, d 3 mo. later Dallas Observer 10-5-2000

5-1-2000 North Port, FL 87 y female, 1600+ stings, d ? days later Miami Herald 5-26-2000

5-29-2000 Hollywood, FL 85 y female, recovered Merchant case files

8-20-2000 Mobile, AL 30s female with mental incapacities, stung hundreds of times, recovered

Merchant case files, Mobile Register 9/7/2000, 10/4/2000

7-19-2001 Palm Beach, FL Elderly male, outcome unknown Palm Beach Post

8-5-2001 Galveston, TX 82 y old female, hundreds of stings, d 3 wks later Houston Chronicle 3/18/2004

4-2002 Bradenton, FL 90 y old female; arm, neck, back, upper torso covered with stings. $1.2 m award

Orlando Sentinel 6-5-2004

8-23-2002 Tyler, TX 91 y old female stung 600+ times. d 6 mo later, unrelated causes, $300K award

Houston Chronicle, 9-8-2002

8-30-2003 Lake Mary, FL Elderly female covered with stings upper body, d later of unrelated causes

Merchant case files

7-7-2004 Calloway, FL Elderly female with numerous fire ant stings, recovered Merchant case files

Page 16: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

What can your facility do?

• Establish contract with reputable pest management company

• Make contractor aware of at-risk patients

• Assign responsible person(s) as contacts for contractor

• Establish and communicate written policy concerning fire ant control and what to do in case of sighting

• Assign staff roles• Nighttime bed checks important for

at-risk residents

Page 17: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

What can you do?• Report fire ant signs

immediately• Remove at-risk patients

from infested room • Record report in pest

control complaint log• Remove foraging trails

with approved cleaning agent

• Collect ants for pest control company

collect ants in ethyl or rubbing alcohol for preservation

Page 18: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

http://fireants.tamu.edu

Texas Imported Fire Ant research and Management Plan

Page 19: Fire Ants and Texas Nursing Homes Staff roles and responsibilities The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project Texas Cooperative Extension Texas A&M University

The Texas Fire Ant in Nursing Home Project

• Mike Merchant, Dallas, TX• Janet Hurley, Dallas, TX• Paul Nester, Houston, TX• Wizzie Brown, Austin, TX• Molly Keck, San Antonio, TX• Kim Schofield, Dallas, TX