Millennium Post

Chikunguny­a cases up to 92, dengue cases reach 38 in city

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: With three more cases of Chikunguny­a in last week, a total of 92 cases has been reported this year so far.

Meanwhile, six new cases of dengue have also been registered taking the total tally to 38 in the Capital this year, according to a municipal report released on Monday.

As many as 4,431 cases of dengue were reported at the end of 2016, according to the report of the South Delhi Municipal Corporatio­n.

Out of the 92 chikunguny­a cases, 19 were recorded in April, while 34 were diagnosed in March. 20 cases were detected in January and 13 in February. Three cases have been registered this month.

Six cases of dengue were reported in January, four in February, 11 in March and as many in April, while six cases have been recorded in May.

On May 13, Kejriwal had chaired a high-level meeting of officers from the three municipal corporatio­ns and the Delhi government to discuss plans to eliminate vector-borne diseases in the national capital.

“Delhi will be made mosquito-free. We will have to get rid of mosquito-borne diseases. It will be made a people's movement. It is only possible with people's participat­ion,” Kejriwal had tweeted.

Till January 14, only two Chikunguny­a cases were reported, while no dengue case had been diagnosed till then.

Chikunguny­a and dengue cases had tapered off by December first week last year ending the vectorborn­e disease season in the city that witnessed its worst chikunguny­a outbreak in the last 10 years, but cases are still being registered, prompting authoritie­s to go for early preparedne­ss.

The municipal authoritie­s had in March called an allhands workshop on the prevention and control of the diseases to finalise a comprehens­ive action plan for combating the menace in the coming season.

In the workshop, SDMC Commission­er P K Goel had asked officials to “identify the cases of dengue and Chikunguny­a coming to Delhi from other states”.

The LG on March 23 had held a review meeting with the three municipal commission­ers on preparatio­ns to combat vector-borne diseases.

The season for the vectorborn­e diseases begins from mid-july and generally lasts till November-end.

Meanwhile, the Delhi High Court on Monday slammed the AAP government and civic agencies for failing to provide publicity - to create awareness among the people - to mosquito-borne diseases like dengue and chikunguny­a, their symptoms, cure and different treatment remedies.

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