Chattanooga Times Free Press

Rio de Janeiro declares a dengue health emergency ahead of Carnival

- BY ELÉONORE HUGHES

RIO DE JANEIRO — Rio de Janeiro declared a public health emergency because of an outbreak of mosquito-borne dengue fever, the city announced Monday, just days before Carnival celebratio­ns kick off across Brazil.

The outbreak wasn’t expected to derail Carnival, which officially starts Friday evening and runs until Feb. 14, but it has prompted a slew of special measures by the city in hopes of containing the illness.

Rio city hall announced the opening of 10 care centers, the creation of an emergency operations center and the allocation of hospital beds for dengue patients. Authoritie­s also will use “smoke cars” in regions with the highest incidence of cases, diffusing an insecticid­e in the air.

Since the beginning of 2024, the municipali­ty has registered more than 10,000 dengue cases. That is just under half of the total cases — 23,000 — recorded throughout all of 2023.

The announceme­nt comes as tourists and revelers are pouring into Rio to take part in street parties and attend the samba schools’ flamboyant parades.

Among Rio state’s operationa­l plans for Carnival, presented by Gov. Cláudio Castro on Monday, is the “Against Dengue Every Day” campaign. That will entail the distributi­on of repellents, stickers, bandannas and hats with warnings about the disease to audiences at the Sambadrome, where a 15-second notice about the fight against the infection also will be shown.

Dengue is a viral infection transmitte­d to humans through the bite of infected mosquitoes and is more common in tropical climates. Frequent rains and high temperatur­es, which accelerate the hatching of mosquito eggs and the developmen­t of larvae, make the famously hot city of Rio susceptibl­e to dengue outbreaks.

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