WHO sounds alarm over dengue fever
WHO sounds alarm over dengue fever
MANILA (AFP): The World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday
issued a call for urgent action after outbreaks of dengue fever
in the South Pacific and Southeast Asia which have killed 189
people this year.
The UN agency's Asia-Pacific office said a total of 46,456
cases had been registered in the region in 2001, the highest
incidence of the mosquito-born disease since 1998, when more than
356,000 people were infected across the region.
In the whole of last year there were 167 deaths from 45,603
reported cases across the Asia-Pacific region.
The hardest hit countries have been Cambodia, which has
reported 90 deaths from 4,163 cases so far this year followed by
the Philippines with 67 from 7,697 cases.
Vietnam, which was not covered by the WHO report, said last
week 44 people had died of the disease this year.
"Levels seen so far in 2001 have been below those seen in 1998
but are higher than in 1999 and 2000, which gives rise for
concern," the WHO said in a statement.
The UN agency urged all tropical countries in the Asia-Pacific
to step up surveillance to detect potential outbreak areas
quickly, and to implement epidemic control measures.
"Vector control measures aimed at eliminating mosquito
breeding sites should begin in outbreak-prone areas early. They
offer the best means of both preventing outbreaks and reducing
the severity of outbreaks when they do occur," it added.
"The message given to the public has to be clear: even small
water collections in their gardens or even inside their houses
can result in sickness or death due to dengue."
Dengue fever is an acute infectious disease caused by a virus
borne by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes that breed in water.
Normal symptoms include fever, headache, severe joint pain, and
rashes.
A more virulent strain of the disease can cause sharp falls in
blood pressure and internal bleeding leading to death in 5
percent of cases.
The highest number of cases this year has been in French
Polynesia, where an estimated 28,600 people were infected in an
outbreak which started in January.
The epidemic there killed four people but now appears to be
under control, WHO said. Non-fatal cases have also been reported
in Samoa and New Caledonia.
Other affected countries include Malaysia, which has
registered 26 deaths from 4,464 cases and Singapore, where there
have been two fatalities out of 1,334 cases this year, according
to the WHO.
The governor of Bangladesh's central bank was flown to Bangkok
last week for treatment after coming down with the disease.
Dengue fever has also caused concern in Latin America with
Venezuela hit by an epidemic in which nearly 25,000 people have
been infected with a strain of the disease not previously seen in
the country.