The Borneo Post

Central America confronts a deadly dengue outbreak

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BOGOTA: Central America is grappling with its worst outbreak of dengue fever in decades – and scientists say the disease is likely to spread and become more frequent in the future due to climate change.

Worst hit is Honduras where about 109 deaths from the mosquito-borne disease have been recorded, many among children, making this year’s dengue fever outbreak the deadliest on record in the Central America nation, the United Nations noted.

Also hard hit in Central America are Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala, with other Latin American nations such as Brazil, Paraguay, Colombia and Belize also affected, according to the Pan American Health Organizati­on (PAHO).

Across Latin America and the Caribbean, dengue cases are rising. At least 2 million people have caught the disease so far this year and more than 720 have died, according to PAHO, the regional arm of the World Health Organisati­on (WHO).

“We have seen dengue cases in the Americas double each decade since the 1980s and this year is particular­ly severe,” said Rachel Lowe, a London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine professor who researches the impact of environmen­tal change on infectious diseases.

The dengue virus is spread by biting Aedes aegypti mosquitoes – the same species that carries other diseases such as chikunguny­a, Zika and yellow fever.

While no single dengue outbreak can be linked directly to climate change, scientists say warming temperatur­es, changing weather conditions and more extreme weather from torrential rains to drought can fuel outbreaks.

“Climate change is altering the climate patterns we expect. These shifting rainfall patterns can change the timing and intensity of outbreaks,” Lowe said.

“One thing we have seen from my research is certainly that warmer temperatur­es and rainfall can increase the risk of dengue outbreaks,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

As climate change strengthen­s, dengue and other mosquitobo­rne diseases are expected to expand into new communitie­s living in highland regions.

“As the temperatur­e warms, mosquitoes can survive at higher altitudes and then people who haven’t previously been exposed to different infections, and don’t have immunity to the diseases, are more susceptibl­e,” Lowe said. — Reuters

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