Amended in Senate June 17, 2013

Senate Concurrent ResolutionNo. 42


Introduced by Senator Fuller

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(Principal coauthor: Senator Galgiani)

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(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Salas)

(Coauthors: Senators Berryhill,begin delete Galgiani,end deletebegin insert Huff,end insert and Monning)

(Coauthors: Assembly Members Grove, Hall, and Patterson)

May 13, 2013


Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 42—Relative to Valley Fever Awareness Month.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

SCR 42, as amended, Fuller. Valley Fever Awareness Month.

This measure would declare August 2013 as Valley Fever Awareness Month.

Fiscal committee: no.

P1    1WHEREAS, Valley Fever (coccidioidomycosis), a progressive,
2multisymptom, respiratory disorder, is a debilitating disease; and

3WHEREAS, Valley Fever is caused by the inhalation of tiny
4airborne fungi that live in the soil but are released into the air by
5soil disturbance or wind; and

6WHEREAS, Valley Fever attacks the respiratory system, causing
7infections that can lead to symptoms that resemble a cold,
8influenza, or pneumonia; and

9WHEREAS, If left untreated or mistreated, infection can spread
10from the lungs into the bloodstream, causing inflammation to the
11skin, permanent damage to lung and bone tissue, and swelling of
P2    1the membrane surrounding the brain, leading to meningitis, which
2can be devastating and even fatal; and

3WHEREAS, Once serious symptoms of Valley Fever appear,
4including pneumonia and labored breathing, prompt treatment with
5often toxic antifungal drugs must be given, which is especially
6disagreeable for patients who require the drugs to be injected
7beneath the base of their skulls for meningitis and which can cause
8side effects such as nausea, fever, and kidney damage; and

9WHEREAS, Within California alone, Valley Fever is found in
10portions of the Sacramento Valley, all of the San Joaquin Valley,
11desert regions, and portions of southern California; and

12WHEREAS, California does not have an official statewide
13method of tracking the rate of Valley Fever infections; and

14WHEREAS, In the last 10 years, infection rates in California
15and Arizona have risen 400 percent, from an estimated 31 cases
16for every 100,000 people in 1999 to 157 cases for every 100,000
17people in 2011; and

18WHEREAS, In Kern County, the rate of infection of Valley
19Fever more than tripled from 2009, for a total of 2,051 cases in
202010 and 2,734 cases in 2011; and

21WHEREAS, San Joaquin County Public Health Services
22recorded 27 cases of Valley Fever in 2009, 46 cases in 2010, and
23123 cases in 2011; and

24WHEREAS, Valley Fever infection rates rose twelvefold
25nationwide from 1995 to 2009, according to thebegin insert federalend insert Centers
26for Disease Control and Prevention, and researchers estimate that
27the fungus infects more than 150,000 people each year who either
28suffer serious ailments without knowing the cause of their illness
29or escape detection of the disease; and

30WHEREAS, Misdiagnosis of Valley Fever is so pervasive that
31experts say that some people suffer and even die from Valley Fever
32without knowing they ever had the disease; and

33WHEREAS, Central Valley prison inmates are being infected
34by Valley Fever at epidemic rates, contributing significantly to the
35state’s prison health care costs; and

36WHEREAS, The rapid spread of Valley Fever at state prisons
37in the Central Valley has resulted in multiple prison inmate deaths
38and prompted calls to close certain affected prisons, further
39exacerbating efforts to comply with federal orders to reduce prison
40overcrowding; and

P3    1WHEREAS, Valley Fever kills between 100 to 200 more
2Americans every year than tuberculosis; and

3WHEREAS, Valley Fever most seriously affects the young, the
4elderly, those with lowered immune systems, and those of African
5American and Filipino descent; and

6WHEREAS, Valley Fever is a disease that has been studied for
7the past 100 years but still remains impossible to control and
8difficult to treat; and

9WHEREAS, There is, to date, no known cure for Valley Fever,
10but researchers are closer than ever to finding a much-needed
11vaccine against this devastating disease; and

12WHEREAS, The research effort to find a vaccine for Valley
13Fever and a funding partnership including the State of California
14were approved by the Legislature and signed by Governor Wilson
15in 1997; now, therefore, be it

16Resolved by the Senate of the State of California, the Assembly
17thereof concurring,
That the Legislature does hereby proclaim
18August 2013 as Valley Fever Awareness Month; and be it further

19Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of
20this resolution to the author for appropriate distribution.



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