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Dengue outbreak in Bangladesh as weather-related aids spread

Health experts have warned that dengue cases could increase sharply in Bangladesh over the next two month due to wet weather conditions and poor mosquito control.

In recent weeks the spread of the disease has accelerated, raising concern after the country's deadliest outbreak ever in 2023.

According to data from the health ministry, dengue deaths increased from one in May to 18 at the end June. Meanwhile, reported infections increased by more than eightfold from 714 to 5,924.

Professor Kabirul bashar, an entomologist from Jahangirnagar University, said that he expects dengue cases to double in 'Dhaka in July compared to June and triple or quadruple by August.

"But the biggest challenge will likely be outside of the capital where several districts face a?risk?of a much steeper increase in infections."

In 2023, over 321,000 people will have been infected. 1,705 of them will die.

In 2024, Bangladesh had 101,214 dengue infections and 575 fatalities.

Dengue is a threat to the country as it deals with?its biggest measles outbreak in decades. More than 100,000 suspected cases, and more than 10,000 confirmed infections, have been reported since mid-March. The death toll has exceeded 700. This puts additional pressure on an already fragile healthcare system.

Bashar stated that heavy rainfall, high temperatures, and humidity created the ideal conditions for dengue transmission. Mosquito control has not kept up with this growing threat.

He called on the government to establish a national 'early warning system' to identify mosquito breeding areas and hotspots that are rising, so authorities could respond quicker and warn communities.

He said that the window for containing the outbreak was closing. (Reporting and editing by Kevin Buckland; Ruma Paul)

(source: Reuters)