Dengue Fever Surges in Latin America
By MICHAEL MELIA,
AP
Posted: 2007-09-30 19:32:18
Filed Under: _Health News_ (http://news.aol.com/health) , _World News_
(http://news.aol.com/world)
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (Sept. 30) - Dengue fever is spreading across Latin
America and the Caribbean in one of the worst outbreaks in decades, causing
agonizing joint pain for hundreds of thousands of people and killing nearly 200
so far this year.
Photo Gallery: Where Is Outbreak Spreading?
Yuri Cortez, AFP / Getty Images
A home in El Salvador is fumigated to rid it of mosquitoes transmitting the
dengue fever in September of 2006. Four different strains of dengue are
spreading thoughout the Americas, worrying officials.
The mosquitoes that carry dengue are thriving in expanded urban slums
scattered with water-collecting trash and old tires. Experts say dengue is
approaching record levels this year as many countries enter their wettest months.
"If we do not slow it down, it will intensify and take a greater social and
economic toll on these countries," said Dr. Jose Luis San Martin, head of
anti-dengue efforts for the Pan American Health Organization, a regional public
health agency.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta has posted
advisories this year for people visiting Latin American and Caribbean
destinations to use mosquito repellant and stay inside screened areas whenever
possible.
"The danger is that the doctors at home don't recognize the dengue," said
Dr. Wellington Sun, the chief of the CDC's dengue branch in San Juan. "The
doctors need to raise their level of suspicion for any traveler who returns with
a fever."
Dengue has already damaged the economies of countries across the region by
driving away tourists, according to a document prepared for a PAHO conference
beginning Monday in Washington.
Some countries have focused mosquito eradication efforts on areas popular
with tourists. Mexico sent hundreds of workers to the resorts of Puerto
Vallarta, Cancun and Acapulco this year to try to avert outbreaks.
Health ministers from across the region meet at the PAHO conference and San
Martin said he will urge them to devote more resources to dengue fever.
The tropical virus was once thought to have been nearly eliminated from
Latin America, but it has steadily gained strength since the early 1980s. Now,
officials fear it could emerge as a pandemic similar to one that became a
leading killer of children in Southeast Asia following World War II.
Officials say the virus is likely to grow deadlier in part because tourism
and migration are circulating four different strains across the region. A
person exposed to one strain may develop immunity to that strain - but subsequent
exposure to another strain makes it more likely the person will develop the
hemorrhagic form.
"The main concern is what's happening in the Americas will recapitulate what
has happened in Southeast Asia, and we will start seeing more and more
severe types of cases of dengue as time progresses," Sun said.
The disease - known as "bonebreak fever" because of the pain - can
incapacitate patients for as long as a week with flu-like symptoms. A deadly
hemorrhagic form, which also causes internal and external bleeding, accounts for less
than 5 percent of cases but has shown signs of growing.
So far this year, 630,356 dengue cases have been reported in the Americas -
most in Brazil, Venezuela, or Colombia - with 12,147 cases of hemorrhagic
fever and 183 deaths, according to the Pan American Health Organization. With
the spread expected to accelerate during the upcoming rainy season in many
countries, cases this year could exceed the 1,015,000 reported in 2002, according
to San Martin.
In Puerto Rico, where 5,592 suspected cases and three deaths have been
reported, some lawmakers called this week for the health secretary to resign.
In the Dominican Republic, which has reported 25 deaths this year, the
health department announced Thursday that it would train 2.5 million public school
students to encourage parents and neighbors to eliminate standing water.
Researchers have not yet developed a vaccine against dengue and Sun said
that for now, the only way to stop the virus is to contain the mosquito
population - a task that relies of countless, relentless individual efforts including
installing screen doors and making sure mosquitoes are not breeding in
garbage.
"It's like telling people to stop smoking," he said. "They may do it for a
while, but they don't do it on a consistent basis and without doing that, it's
not effective."
While dengue is increasing around the developing world, the problem is most
dramatic in the Americas, according to the CDC.
Health officials believe the resurgence of the malaria-like illness is due
partly to a premature easing of eradication programs in the 1970s.
Migration and tourism also have carried new strains of the virus across
national borders, even into the United States, which had largely wiped out the
disease after a 1922 outbreak that infected a half-million people.
Mexico has been struggling with an alarming increase in the deadly
hemorrhagic form of dengue, which now accounts for roughly one in four cases. The
government has confirmed 3,249 cases of hemorraghic dengue for the year through
Sept. 15, up from 1,924 last year.
The CDC says there is no drug to treat hemorrhagic dengue, but proper
treatment, including rest, fluids and pain relief, can reduce death rates to about
1 percent.
San Martin said he use the meetings starting Monday to urge enforcement of
trash disposal regulations, more investment in mosquito control and new
incentives for communities to participate.
"It is a battle of every government, every community and every individual,"
he said.
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