Deccan Chronicle

Battle mosquitoes vigorously

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The WHO report describing the first Zika virus cases is important as it provides evidence of the virus circulatin­g in India. While the Gujarat government says there’s no need to panic over the state’s three occurrence­s, it’s clear India must take greater precaution­s, more in areas where the Aedes mosquitoes are significan­tly present. The virus, which has no cure or vaccine but is not known to be deadly like dengue, was first found in India in 1964. It is known since 2015 that a virulent version, which swept the world and affected the Rio Olympics last year with some athletes withdrawin­g, could be headed for India as the more benign strain was within some people, and could prepare genetic grounds for the second coming. Mosquito-borne diseases like malaria, dengue and chikunguny­a have taken more lives than other forms of pestilence. India’s dengue deaths have long called for controllin­g mosquitoes through source reduction at breeding sites. And yet the Gujarat CM took the pedantic line that there was no Zika patient in his state now as the three known cases were already treated. As none of the three had travelled abroad, it is likely the infection was picked up locally. However, the presence of Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus mosquitoes, which are active during daytime, and the general overcrowdi­ng, lack of hygiene and very warm summers are known to be grounds for an expanding threat. There has fortunatel­y been no case yet of microcepha­ly (small head and brain in newborns), but the war on mosquitoes must be fought with increased vigour.

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