Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

DHA Public Health Launches MilTICK SURE Path: Surveillance for Understudied, Rare Emerging Pathogens

Image of DHA Public Health Launches MilTICK SURE Path: Surveillance for Understudied, Rare Emerging Pathogens. Robyn Nadolny (left), chief of the Defense Health Agency-Public Health vector-borne disease branch, works with U.S. Army Spc. Taylor Cremeans to identify a tick for the MilTICK program. MilTICK SURE Path uses MilTICK specimens already submitted, and subjects them to additional testing for rare pathogens at the end of each calendar year. The SURE Path program allows the VBD team to better understand emerging tick-borne threats to military communities, and notify installations and individuals if rare pathogens are discovered. (DHA Public Health graphic illustration by Ethel Kefauver.)

The Military Tick Identification/Infection Confirmation Kit program has expanded, and the Defense Health Agency-Public Health vector-borne disease team is now conducting additional off-season screening of ticks submitted through the MilTICK program.

The MilTICK program, which serves all military branches, tests human-biting ticks submitted by Department of Defense beneficiaries.

“The results of the MilTICK tick identification and testing are reported out to the submitter in an official report, and the ticks may also be retained for additional testing and surveillance for emerging tick-borne pathogens,” said Robyn Nadolny, chief, DHA-PH VBD branch. “Ticks submitted to MilTICK are tested for commonly occurring pathogens within a 30-day turnaround time, usually much quicker. This enables the person bitten by the tick to seek medical advice in a timely manner if the tick is found positive for a human pathogen.”

SURE Path Expands Testing for Rare and Emerging Pathogens

The new Surveillance for Understudied, Rare, and Emerging Pathogens, or SURE Path, program began in December 2023, said Nadolny.

“MilTICK SURE Path utilizes MilTICK specimens already submitted, and subjects them to additional testing for rare pathogens at the end of each calendar year,” said Nadolny. “The SURE Path program allows the VBD team to better understand emerging tick-borne threats to military communities, and notify installations and individuals if rare pathogens are discovered.”

Rare pathogens are disease-causing organisms found in ticks with fewer than 200 human cases in the U.S. each year as reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Nadolny. The MilTICK program does not routinely test for these agents in order to expedite turnaround time for pathogens more likely to cause human disease and have a higher medical relevance, like the agents of Lyme disease or ehrlichiosis.

The MilTICK SURE Path testing process begins at the end of each calendar year, after the bulk of MilTICK screening is completed during the summer months, said Nadolny. This end-of-season testing is typically completed from November to March. Samples are tested for rare and emerging pathogens, such as Powassan virus, the agent of tularemia, novel spotted fever group Rickettsia, and others. This testing is conducted during the off season as to not slow down seasonal testing for more common agents of human disease.

“If a MilTICK SURE Path tick tests positive for a rare pathogen, the infection status of the sample will be double-confirmed through an additional test in order to verify the positive result,” said Nadolny. “The VBD team may collaborate with other federal laboratories to confirm the positive with sensitive and specific molecular tests. Once a positive is confirmed, notifications will be distributed to the point of contact listed on the MilTICK form originally submitted with the tick, and to the leaders at the submitting clinic and the installation (if applicable) as soon as possible.”

Notifications will describe the potential disease-related threat, the MilTICK SURE Path process, and suggestions on how to proceed, said Nadolny.

Benefits of SURE Path Screening

The identification of the rare pathogen provides the health care team with critical information to be shared with the individual that submitted the tick to begin a dialogue on symptoms and potential care, said Nadolny. Additionally, clinic and installation leadership are afforded an opportunity to better understand emerging tick-borne disease risks at their installation and promote timely actions that could mitigate the potential threat.

Nadolny explained some likely actions and benefits of a confirmed MilTICK SURE Path pathogen. There are a number of possible actions the clinic, command, and the MilTICK staff can take:

  • Clinic leaders can raise awareness with clinic staff to be on the alert for symptoms associated with rare tick-borne diseases.
  • Installation leaders can work with public health or entomology personnel to conduct additional tick surveillance to better identify local “hotspots” where ticks are infected.
  • The MilTICK program can use these results to implement additional “spot testing” of ticks from installations where rare threats may be emerging.
  • MilTICK staff can work with state public health officials and inform them of positive results.

Resources

You also may be interested in...

Article Around MHS
May 1, 2024

The Defense Centers for Public Health Aberdeen Looks to Experts at the Navy Entomology Center of Excellence for the Latest on Insect Genetics

military personnel conducting insect study

The U.S. Navy Entomology Center of Excellence, the U.S. Navy’s insect experts, provided training on techniques in genetics to the Defense Centers for Public Health-Aberdeen’s Vector-Borne Disease Branch, April 1-5, 2024, in Jacksonville, Florida.

Article Around MHS
Mar 8, 2024

Navy Entomology Center for Excellence Aids in Hunt for Invasive Mosquito Species Spreading at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay

U.S. Navy Lt. Thomas McGlynn, of Navy Entomology Center of Excellence, and U.S. Army Capt. Mark Kartzinel, of Army Public Health Command East, select sites for mosquito surveillance, a form of surveillance where a container of water is used to collect eggs from mosquitoes, at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, on Jan. 14, 2024. (Photo by James Butler/U.S. Navy)

U.S. Navy Lt. Thomas McGlynn, a medical entomologist with the Navy Entomology Center of Excellence in Jacksonville, Florida, traveled to Naval Station Guantanamo Bay in support of Naval Hospital Guantanamo Bay Preventive Medicine, Joint Task Force Guantanamo, and U.S. Army Public Health Command East, to provide mission-critical entomological training ...

Article Around MHS
Jul 13, 2023

Entomologist Augments Warfighter Research Across Indo Pacific Region

U.S. Navy Lt. Thomas McGlynn, a medical entomologist at the Navy Entomology Center of Excellence, poses for a photo with Malaysian commissioned and noncommissioned officers, Malaysian public health officials, and researchers from the University of Malaysia Sabah during their training in Johor Bahru, Malaysia on Feb. 9. (Photo: U.S. Navy Lt. Nicholas Johnston)

Naval Medical Research Unit 2 was established during World War II in Guam to conduct applied research in support of force health protection and has operated intermittently since 1955. Currently, NAMRU-2 is located in Singapore and acts as the center of a hub-and-spoke research model in multiple southeastern Asian countries such as Vietnam, Thailand, ...

Article
Jun 13, 2023

Four TRICARE Tips To Avoid Bug Bites This Summer

4 TRICARE Tips To Avoid Bug Bites This Summer

Summer is a time for having fun outdoors. Unfortunately, you and your family aren’t the only ones having fun outside. Bugs—and bug bites—increase dramatically in the summer months. Although most bug bites are harmless, some bugs can spread dangerous diseases. For example, mosquitos can carry malaria, West Nile Virus, Zika, dengue, and chikungunya, ...

Article Around MHS
Jun 13, 2023

Bug Awareness Week: Small Bugs Pack a Pathogenic Punch

Ehrlichiosis is the general name used to describe diseases caused by the bacteria Ehrlichia chaffeensis, E. ewingii, or E. muris eauclairensis in the United States. These bacteria are spread to people primarily through the bite of infected ticks including the lone star tick (Amblyomma americanum) and the blacklegged tick (Ixodes scapularis).

According to the DHA, everyone is vulnerable to diseases spread by infected insects such as mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas, also called vectors. Find out how you and you family can learn more about these pest as part of DHA's Bug Week celebration. And also get some great travel tips to keep your summer vacation pest-free.

Article Around MHS
Jun 13, 2023

MilTICK Study Finds Use of Permethrin-Treated Uniforms Can Reduce Tick-Borne Illness Risk

According to a DCPH-A fact sheet, the DOD Insect Repellent System is a safe and proven method to reduce disease and annoyance associated with insects.

A recent study conducted by biologists who manage the Department of Defense Military Tick Identification/Infection Confirmation Kit, or MilTICK, program, found that ticks submitted to the program by service members wearing permethrin-treated uniforms were significantly less likely to have become engorged.

Article
Jun 9, 2023

Fly on the Wall: Interview with a Bug Expert

Maj. Elizabeth Foley, a U.S. Air Force entomologist and bug expert, is chief of the force health branch at the U.S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Dayton, Ohio. Foley, in a makeshift lab, is looking for mosquitos and mosquito larvae in a water sample. (Photo: Air Force Maj. Elizabeth Foley)

Air Force Maj. Elizabeth Foley, an entomologist and bug expert, is chief of the force health branch at the U.S. Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio. In an interview for Bug Week 2023, happening June 10-17, Foley described the role of entomologists across the Military Health System as they work to ...

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: July 26, 2024
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery