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Home - Infectious Diseases - Blastomycosis Gains Ground: New York Emerges as an Endemic Zone

Infectious Diseases

Blastomycosis Gains Ground: New York Emerges as an Endemic Zone

Last updated: February 27, 2026 3:38 am
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Blastomycosis Gains Ground: New York Emerges as an Endemic Zone

A new epidemiological report from the CDC highlights a significant shift in the geographic footprint of blastomycosis, a serious fungal infection. Analysis of cases from 2000 to 2024 indicates that New York state is now an emerging endemic area for this pathogen. This finding, published in Emerging Infectious Diseases, underscores a changing landscape for fungal disease distribution in the United States, with implications for outbreak surveillance and public health preparedness.

Why it might matter to you: This report directly impacts clinical awareness and diagnostic protocols for infectious disease specialists. As the endemic range of fungal pathogens like *Blastomyces* expands, you may encounter cases in regions previously considered low-risk, necessitating updated differential diagnoses. For public health professionals, this signals a need to enhance local surveillance systems and educate clinicians in newly affected areas to prevent diagnostic delays and improve patient outcomes.

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