Belts and summer health risks, Sheriff: As temperatures increase, they activate.

University Professor Kurtesh the Sheriff has talked about the risk of ticks.
He said that ticks are parasites that absorb blood and that are especially activated during the summer at the rise of temperatures, reports Clen Kosovo, broadcast Periscope.
By the way, with temperature heating at the end of spring and early summer, the ticks are activated, especially in the wild, but not in high concentrations. They're places, they create their own habitats, but to stay in one place they have to have to breathe blood. So, they're parasites that absorb blood and demand to multiply. In our country, we have them in a field or mountainous environment, but fortunately it's not like we have them in our environments or the environments we live in, said the Sheriff. /Periscope












