Updated
Updated · St. Paul Pioneer Press · Jun 21
Minnesota Warns Powassan Risk Is Rising as 5% of Ticks Test Positive
Updated
Updated · St. Paul Pioneer Press · Jun 21

Minnesota Warns Powassan Risk Is Rising as 5% of Ticks Test Positive

3 articles · Updated · St. Paul Pioneer Press · Jun 21

Summary

  • Minnesota health officials said tick populations are moving north and tick-bite-related emergency room visits are increasing, raising concern about Powassan virus during the state's peak risk window from late May to mid-July.
  • 14 cases in 2024 marked Minnesota's peak year for Powassan, followed by eight in 2025; officials said the virus remains uncommon but can cause encephalitis, permanent neurological damage and death, with no treatment available.
  • Cass and Itasca counties logged six to seven reported cases each from 2008 to 2022, the highest in the state, and the west side of Gull Lake was identified as a prime exposure area.
  • Diagnostics are difficult because symptoms often resemble fever, headache or muscle aches and the virus is not routinely included in many tick-borne disease panels, though antibody and PCR testing are available.
  • One Gull Lake victim, Jeffrey Johannsen, died in 2023 at 69 after severe neurological decline, underscoring officials' push for prevention through EPA-registered repellents, permethrin and protective clothing.

Insights

With no treatment for the deadly Powassan virus, how close are scientists to a breakthrough vaccine?
As lethal ticks move north, is this a preview of the hidden health crises of climate change?
A fatal tick virus transmits in 15 minutes. Are tick checks now a dangerously outdated prevention method?