Gulf News

Australia to help Sri Lanka fight dengue

Disease has claimed 250 lives and infected nearly 100,000 people so far this year

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Australia is contributi­ng funds to help Sri Lanka combat its worst outbreak of dengue fever, which has claimed 250 lives and infected nearly 100,000 people so far this year in the Indian Ocean island nation.

Visiting Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said Wednesday night that Australia is giving 475,000 Australian dollars (Dh1.38 million) to the World Health Organizati­on to implement immediate dengue prevention, management and eradicatio­n programmes in Sri Lanka.

Inspection of houses

Sri Lanka’s hospitals are overcrowde­d with patients, and the government has deployed soldiers, police and health officials to inspect houses and clear rotting garbage, stagnant water pools and other potential mosquito-breeding grounds across the country. Health officials blamed the public for their failure to clear puddles and piles of trash after last month’s heavy monsoon rains.

The number of infections nationwide is already 38 per cent higher than last year, when 55,150 people were diagnosed with dengue and 97 died, according to the Health Ministry. Cases were concentrat­ed around Colombo, but were occurring across the nation.

Bishop is on a two-day visit and was expected to meet with government leaders yesterday.

She said Australia is offering an additional 1 million dollars for a research partnershi­p between Australia’s Monash University and Sri Lanka’s Health Ministry to test the introducti­on of naturally occurring Wolbachia bacteria to eradicate dengue fever from Sri Lanka.

Bacteria blocks diseases

She said the bacteria “prevent transmissi­on of dengue virus between humans” and that it has shown success during the last six years in countries such as Brazil, Columbia, Australia, India, Vietnam and Indonesia where it was piloted. The bacteria have the ability to block other mosquito-borne diseases such as Zika and Chikunguny­a, the Australian embassy said.

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