"It's been really hot and dry and now we're starting to get a little bit of rain. Then usually after the rain, we'd get a little wind, right? We get a nice light breeze and the sun's shining, and you say ‘oh boy the rain washed things' and I'm outdoors, but that's where the Valley Fever is and it's growing," said Dr. Augustine D. Munoz, a pulmonologist with Kern Medical.
Path to Full Story on KERO Channel 23 ABC News