Plague, Pestilences and Diseases
Puerto Rico: Dengue Fever outbreak claims another 3 fatalities
By DAVID McFADDEN
The Associated Press
Monday, July 5, 2010; 2:54 PM
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -- Puerto Rico's top health official warned
Monday that the U.S. island could face its worst-ever dengue fever
outbreak if people don't act quickly to destroy breeding areas for
disease-spreading mosquitoes.
Health Secretary Lorenzo Gonzalez Feliciano issued the warning after a
37-year-old woman from the northern town of Hatillo died of the
hemorrhagic form of the tropical virus. Her death was the third
fatality from dengue fever so far this year on the island.
Unless islanders take urgent measures to eradicate bug breeding areas
by draining standing water near their houses, the Caribbean territory
will experience a public health crisis in coming months, Gonzalez said.
"If we do not act now, we will see a catastrophe in the months of
August and September that could reach record numbers and would make it
much more difficult to control," said Gonzalez, who also urged people
to sleep under mosquito nets and wear repellent.
The government has dispatched trucks to neighborhoods and schools to
spray a mist that kills mosquitoes, but Gonzalez said too many Puerto
Ricans have let down their guard against the virus. He urged islanders
to report neighbor to authorities if they leave stagnant water on their
property.
Damp, hot weather creates favorable mosquito breeding conditions, so
the situation may be worsened by the unusually wet weather that soaked
Puerto Rico in May and June.
Puerto Rico's worst dengue outbreak was in 1998, when the virus
sickened 17,000 and caused 19 deaths.
Dengue has no vaccine. It generally causes fever, headaches and extreme
joint and muscle pain. Most sufferers recover within a week. The more
severe hemorrhagic form can be deadly.
Once thought to have been nearly eliminated from Latin America, dengue
has gained strength in the region since the early 1980s, in part
because tourism and migration are circulating four different strains,
increasing the risk of multiple exposure and making it more likely
victims will come down with the hemorrhagic form.