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Millions infected with dengue this year in new record as hotter temperatures cause virus to flare

Published:Wednesday | December 13, 2023 | 9:04 AM
A health worker fumigates a home for mosquitos to help mitigate the spread of dengue in Caranavi, Bolivia, March 2, 2023. Dengue is sweeping across the Western Hemisphere in numbers not seen since record-keeping began more than four decades ago. (AP Photo/Juan Karita,File)

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — Dengue is sweeping across the Western Hemisphere in numbers not seen since record-keeping began more than four decades ago, with experts warning that rising temperatures and rapid urbanisation are accelerating the pace of infections.

A record more than four million cases have been reported throughout the Americas and Caribbean so far this year, surpassing a previous record set in 2019, with officials from the Bahamas to Brazil warning of crowded clinics and new infections daily.

More than 2,000 deaths in that region also have been reported.

“This year is the year we've been seeing the most dengue in recorded history,” said Thais dos Santos, adviser on surveillance and control of arboviral diseases with the Pan American Health Organization, the regional office of the World Health Organization in the Americas.

She noted that record-keeping began in 1980.

“Vector-borne diseases, especially these diseases that are transmitted by mosquitoes … provide us a really good sentinel of what is happening with climate change.”

Poor sanitation and a lack of robust health systems have contributed to a rise in cases, but experts say droughts and floods linked to climate change are causing greater transmission of the virus, with stored water and heavy rains attracting mosquitoes.

Dr. Gabriela Paz-Bailey, chief of the dengue branch for the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Puerto Rico, noted that higher temperatures also are extending the mosquito's habitat and helping the virus develop faster inside the mosquito, leading to higher viral loads and higher probability of transmission.

“These infections are a symptom of some big underlying trends happening in the world,” Dr. Jeremy Farrar, chief scientist of the World Health Organization, said in an interview. “Climate change is seemingly so difficult to address, and so many countries are now becoming urbanised, I can see dengue and the other diseases…becoming increasingly frequent and increasingly complex to deal with.”

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