FIPS 44 · USPS RI · 5 counties

Rhode Island

Tick species established in Rhode Island, CDC-reported disease cases by county, and the county-level breakdown of where ticks and pathogens concentrate.

Ticks established here

2 species

Disease cases reported here

8 diseases
DiseaseTotal casesCountiesYears covered
Lyme disease
Lyme disease is a bacterial infection (Borrelia burgdorferi) spread by black-legged ticks and the most common tick-borne illness in the US.
17,265523
Babesiosis
Babesiosis is a malaria-like parasitic infection of red blood cells (Babesia microti) carried by black-legged ticks in the Northeast and Upper Midwest.
99052
Anaplasmosis
Anaplasmosis is a bacterial infection (Anaplasma phagocytophilum) spread by black-legged ticks across the Northeast, Upper Midwest, and Pacific Coast.
84952
Ehrlichia chaffeensis ehrlichiosis
Ehrlichia chaffeensis ehrlichiosis is a bacterial infection of white blood cells spread by lone star ticks across the Southeast and south-central US.
27952
Spotted fever rickettsiosis
Spotted fever rickettsiosis is a group of bacterial infections — Rocky Mountain spotted fever among them — spread by dog and wood ticks across the US.
2952
Ehrlichia ewingii ehrlichiosis
Ehrlichia ewingii ehrlichiosis is a bacterial infection spread by lone star ticks, typically affecting immunocompromised patients in the southeastern US.
052
Tularemia
Tularemia is a highly infectious bacterial disease (Francisella tularensis) transmitted by tick bites, deer fly bites, and contact with infected animals.
052
Undetermined ehrlichiosis/anaplasmosis
Undetermined ehrlichiosis/anaplasmosis is the CDC reporting category for cases where the specific Ehrlichia or Anaplasma species could not be identified.
052

Worst counties · cumulative disease load

top 3
RankCountyTotal casesDiseasesLatest year
01Providence County6,75882023
02Washington County6,57482023
03Kent County2,97582023

We frame this as epidemiology, not stigma — high-load counties are places with higher tick density and reporting completeness, not worse places to live.