Valley fever
How do you get Valley fever?
You can get Valley fever by breathing in dust from outdoor air that contains spores of the Coccidioides fungus that grows in the soil. Like seeds from a plant, a fungus grows and spreads from tiny spores that are too small to see. When soil or dirt is stirred up by strong winds or while digging, dust containing these fungus spores can get into the air. Anyone who lives, works, or travels in an area where the Valley fever fungus grows can breathe in these fungus spores from outdoor dust without knowing it and become infected. Valley fever is not contagious, meaning it cannot spread from one person or animal to another.
When can you get Valley fever?
In California, people can get Valley fever at any time of the year, but more cases are diagnosed and reported in the fall (late September through November) than at other times of the year. Since it often takes weeks for people who have Valley fever to develop symptoms or get properly diagnosed, this means people who get Valley fever are usually infected in the summer (June through early September), during drier times of the year. More people also get Valley fever in the years after a drought has ended in California. Learn more about how drought impacts Valley fever.
Where can you get Valley fever?
Most cases of Valley fever in California are reported from the Central Valley and Central Coast regions of the state. But the number of cases has also been increasing nearby in the northern Central Valley and southern coastal areas of California. People are more likely to get Valley fever if they live, work, or travel in these areas or travel to
other places where Valley fever has been reported, including nearby southwestern states, Mexico, and Central and South America. There is no commercial test available to see if the Valley fever fungus is in the dirt or dust in certain areas, but we do know that Valley fever has been diagnosed in people living throughout California. The map below shows the rates (or number of cases per 100,000 people) of reported Valley fever cases by county in California from 2014 to 2018.
From 2000-2018:
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