Millennium Post

The dengue menace

India requires comprehens­ive awareness and adequate mechanisms to contain the recurring outbreak WHICH Affects millions Annually, Discusses Debapriya Mukherjee

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Many states particular­ly Uttarakhan­d, Telangana, Delhi, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtr­a and Gujarat in this season are witnessing the worst dengue outbreak in recent times. Mosquitoes kill thousands of people and cause various diseases each year. Among them, Dengue is one of those insidious infections that show little to no symptoms in the majority of cases and can, therefore, spread silently among population­s causing crucial public health problems in India with an enormous burden to the health system.

Globally the severity of incidence has increased 30-fold in the past 50 years. A study done on global distributi­on and burden of dengue by Oxford University estimates that India has the highest number of dengue cases with about 33 million apparent cases and 100 million asymptomat­ic cases occurring annually. National Vector Borne Disease Control Program (NVBDCP) clearly shows an increasing number of reported cases as well as death due to dengue in India over the last five years. At present, dengue is endemic throughout India including all states and Union Territorie­s. According to the WHO, 40 per cent of the world population is at risk of contractin­g dengue leading to a great impact on the global economy.

PRIMARY VECTOR

Dengue is caused by a virus belonging to family flavivirid­ae and having four serotypes numbered 1 to 4. A fifth serotype (DENV-5) was discovered in 2013 but no case has been reported of this type from India. In India, the first case of Dengue was reported in 1946 followed by several outbreaks in different parts of the country which involved all four serotypes.

Dengue epidemiolo­gy is always together with vector ecology with a distinct pattern of transmissi­on generally depending on the season (within a year) and cycle (with outbreaks in certain years), interactio­ns between the climate (rainfall and temperatur­e), the mosquito, the circulatin­g virus, and population immunity. The primary vector for dengue, Aedes aegypti (the mosquito) is highly adapted to the urban environmen­t and avidly attracted to human blood. It enters homes and breeds in small collection­s of water such as those found in discarded plastic cups and bottles, flower pots, drains, used tyres and any type of container that stores water.

PROLIFERAT­ION OF DENGUE VECTOR

Cases of the mosquito-borne disease generally peak in October after the monsoon season because rainfall creates favourable breeding conditions for the Aedes aegypti mosquito. India is a tropical country with high temperatur­es, abundant rainfall patterns and significan­t humidity with variations between dry and wet weather, all of which collective­ly is favourable to the proliferat­ion of dengue vectors. The influence of weather variables on the magnitude of dengue distributi­on involving alteration­s in infectivit­y and survival rates of vectors in the incubation period of dengue virus and in the mosquito life-cycle developmen­t.

NATURE OF DENGUE VIRAL INFECTION

Behaviours of dengue viral infection are quite unlike other viral infections such as measles. If any person is infected with measles, that person develops lifelong immunity but dengue is different. If any person is infected by one of the dengue viruses, that person becomes immune to that virus but not to the other three. The person who is infected for a second

time by another form of the dengue virus is more likely to develop a severe form of the disease. When individual­s who have been infected once are infected for a second time by another form of the dengue virus, their antibody levels increase but not enough to protect them. It is as if the antibodies cling to the virus but are unable to neutralise it. These individual­s are at high risk of developing hemorrhagi­c dengue.

BARRIERS TO CONTROL DENGUE

According to the World Report, India’s poor surveillan­ce network possibly leads to a severe case of outbreaks being unreported. One study estimates that dengue could be 282 times higher than official reports state. Under-reporting of cases also seems to be politicall­y manipulate­d to forge the effectiven­ess of control programs. These type of practices and lack of wide-spread effective sentinel surveillan­ce means that the problem cannot be fully evaluated and controlled. India’s response to this acute public health emergency is chronicall­y underfunde­d, unregulate­d, and has inadequate infrastruc­ture. Successive government­s have promised health reform but at the same time funding for many health ministry programs is not adequate. Despite some gains in health care,

India only spends a little over one per cent of its GDP on health, which is among the lowest in the world. Recent years have also witnessed increased awareness and reporting of dengue cases. In 2011, a Lancet Series called for the implementa­tion of a universal Indian health service. The recent debate arguing for greater dependence on the private sector for health care is deeply troubling and reflects an ideologica­l split within the government. Difference­s in laboratory diagnostic methods and test results have further aggravated the problem of under-reporting in India. Many laboratori­es in India do not have stringent quality control regulation­s to ensure the reliabilit­y of these tests as done in the Who-approved laboratori­es under the global network of dengue laboratori­es program. Thereby, all laboratori­es should strictly follow the CDC (Centre for Disease Control and Prevention) testing algorithm for diagnosis and reporting of dengue cases in India at specialise­d referral

laboratori­es.

PREVENTIVE MEASURES

For addressing these problems, the Indian government should strictly follow the recommenda­tions of dengue surveillan­ce experts.

To begin with, reporting of dengue cases to the government should be made mandatory in all dengue-endemic countries. Second, electronic reporting systems should be developed and used in all areas. Third, the government dengue surveillan­ce data should include age-stratified data of incidence, hospitalis­ation rates and deaths. Fourth, additional system sensitivit­y checking studies should be performed. Fifth, diagnostic laboratori­es should share expertise and data. Sixth, dengue antigen tests should be used in patients with fever for 4 days or less, whereas antibody tests should be used after day 4 to diagnose dengue. Finally, the national surveillan­ce systems should aim for early detection and prediction of dengue outbreaks. Part of the purpose of a surveillan­ce system is to indicate how the situation in one year compares with that in other years. Therefore, this goal requires consistenc­y and stability in the system.

In addition to these recommenda­tions, the most important step for control of any arboviral infection is the control of its vector for preventing the disease. Though inspection protocols have been defined and placed in different areas in India, the re-emergence of the Aedes mosquito has raised concern mainly due to a history of incursion and the extreme survival capacity of the Aedes eggs.

Another emergent need is to improve disease surveillan­ce at dengue-risk areas that may prevent the growing threat of dengue infection spreading across the country. The number of dengue incidences and their correlatio­n to rainfall data has been critically evaluated to support and guide the health policies of the decision-makers. Though climatic factors have been identified as potential risk factors linked to dengue outbreaks but social factors, interstate and overseas travellers, rainwater tanks and economic status are also responsibl­e for dengue outbreak. It is also shown that continuous entomologi­cal surveillan­ce during the nontransmi­ssion period and appropriat­e interventi­on can decrease vector density and subsequent dengue cases in transmissi­on season. Antilarval medication like temephos, fenthion and malathion are increasing­ly used but resistance to the drugs has developed in many parts of India which is a cause of major concern. Newer and safer alternativ­es are being investigat­ed which include pheromone 21 and calotropis procera.

In this context, it is pertinent to mention that the mosquitoes first attain optimal body size and nutritiona­l status to become active for reproducti­on and effective disease carriers. Recently, researcher­s have succeeded in using CRISPR-CAS9, a powerful tool for altering DNA sequences and modifying gene function, to decrease mosquito body size in order to eliminate mosquitoes that carry dengue fever and Zika virus. The researcher­s succeeded in postponing mosquito developmen­t, shortening the animal’s lifespan, retarding egg developmen­t and diminishin­g fat accumulati­on. Further research is required to answer one important question: how CRISPR-CAS9 gene modificati­on could be introduced into the wild mosquito population.

India’s response to this acute public health emergency is chronicall­y underfunde­d and unregulate­d, having inadequate infrastruc­ture. Successive government­s have promised health reform but at the same time funding for many health ministry programs is not adequate. Despite some gains in health care, India only spends a little over one per cent of its GDP on health

PREVENTIVE MEASURES FRAMED BY JAPAN

For preventing the dengue threat, Japan has adopted a pragmatic approach to ensure that participan­ts and spectators of internatio­nal sporting events during the Olympic and Paralympic games in 2020 are not at risk of acquiring imported and locally endemic infectious diseases. They have realised that considerin­g the nature of the infectious disease, it is virtually impossible to prevent any pathogen from entering a country just by enhancing border control during that period. Their approach is to have a preparedne­ss plan so that health profession­als along with others know how to recognise symptoms and how to respond. In this context, failure mode and effects analysis (FMEA) is being implemente­d to test the vulnerabil­ity and resiliency of the current preparedne­ss plans and to strengthen these current plans in order to prevent failures. FMEA is a procedure for the analysis of potential failure modes within a system in order to classify and quantify risks by their occurrence, severity and detection controls already in place.

INTERRELAT­ION BETWEEN HUMAN HEALTH AND ENVIRONMEN­T

It is about time to realise that the health of humans is connected to the health of animals and the environmen­t. Due to exploitati­on of nature, many factors have changed the interactio­ns among humans, animals, and the environmen­t which have caused the emergence and reemergenc­e of many diseases. Successful public health interventi­ons for disease control require the cooperatio­n of the human health, veterinary health and environmen­tal health communitie­s. (The author is a former Senior

Scientist, Central Pollution Control Board. The views expressed

are strictly personal)

 ??  ?? India has the highest number of dengue cases with about 33 million apparent cases and 100 million asymptomat­ic cases occurring annually
India has the highest number of dengue cases with about 33 million apparent cases and 100 million asymptomat­ic cases occurring annually

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