Sri Lankan health personnel have reported a
three-fold increase in the number of recorded dengue fever cases in the first
quarter of this year.
Sri
Lankan health personnel have reported a three-fold increase in the number of
recorded dengue fever cases in the first quarter of this year.
“This
rise is mainly due to weather patterns,” Sudath Peries, deputy chief
epidemiologist at the Epidemiology Unit of Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Health, told
IRIN.
Containers
or hollows where stagnant water can accumulate provide breeding grounds for
mosquitoes, promoting the spread of dengue.
“If
there are heavy rains and flooding, dengue breeding grounds will likely be
washed away,” said Sumanasiri Gamage, an independent health worker. “However,
due to intermittent rains, the breeding continues.”
According
to the World Health Organization (WHO), dengue is the most common
mosquito-borne viral disease in humans. Some 2.5 billion people – two-fifths of
the world’s population – are at risk from dengue fever, with an estimated 50
million infections worldwide every year.
The
Epidemiology Unit said 9,317 dengue cases and 38 deaths were reported in the
first three months of 2012, against 3,103 in the first quarter of 2011.
The
highest number occurred in January, when 3,892 cases were reported, followed by
3,004 in February and 2,421 in March.
Local
media reported that over 50 percent of dengue cases occurred in the country’s
Western Province, where most of the island’s 20 million inhabitants live.
Sri
Lanka’s meteorological department forecasts that intermittent rains are likely
to continue until late April. Heavy rainfall usually occurs during the
southwest monsoon (May to September) and during the northeast monsoon
(September to January).
Gamage
said the public should remain vigilant against the risk of dengue even though
there was a downturn in the number of cases in 2011, when 28,473 cases and 185
deaths were reported, compared to 2010 when there were 34,105 recorded cases
and 245 deaths.
Health
officials agree that removing mosquito breeding sites is the most important
step in mitigating risk. In May 2010 the government launched a campaign to curb
the spread of the disease.
Fines
of US$50-$150 were instituted, and health officials carried out random
inspections of homes, offices and public areas, while the armed forces and
police were deployed to clean public areas.
Sri
Lanka is classified as a “Category A” country by WHO, which means dengue fever
is a leading cause of hospitalization and death among children; there are
cyclical epidemics in urban areas; and the virus is a major public health
concern.
Three
other countries in Southeast Asia share this classification: Thailand,
Indonesia, and Timor-Leste.
Source: IRIN.
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