If you live in Los Angeles County, you might want to pay closer attention to flea bites. A new report shows cases of fleaborne typhus are increasing there. This is a bacterial illness you can get from flea bites, often from fleas that live on animals like rats, stray cats, or opossums. It can make people quite sick with fever, headaches, and a rash.
The report looked at residents across the county and found a concerning upward trend in infections. It doesn't tell us exactly how many more people are getting sick or which neighborhoods are most affected, but the direction is clear: the risk is growing.
This isn't a study testing a treatment or proving a cause. It's a warning signal from public health monitoring. We don't know yet if this is due to more animals carrying the bacteria, changes in the environment, or something else. The report doesn't mention any specific safety problems with treatments, because it's focused on tracking the disease itself.
The bottom line is that the germs causing this fever are finding more opportunities to spread. For now, the smartest move is to be cautious around areas where fleas and their animal hosts might be common, and to see a doctor if you get a fever after a flea bite.