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PAKISTAN: Fear of dengue fever spreads

A.Rahman

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LAHORE, 20 October (IRIN) - Fear of the black and white striped mosquito responsible for spreading dengue fever has been keeping thousands of people indoors across the Pakistani provinces of Sindh and the Punjab.

Levels of concern have risen sharply, since the first cases of dengue virus - causing high fever, severe body aches and sometimes death if left untreated - were reported several weeks ago. There have been at least 20 deaths, almost all in the southern province of Sindh.

But the disease has now reached the Punjab. One woman suspected of having the disease in the town of Chakwal, about 80 km south of the federal capital Islamabad, died three days ago.

The deadly virus, carried by the Aedes mosquito, is not normally a hazard in Pakistan. Indeed little is known about the disease in the country, with some doctors in Lahore confessing they were forced to look up text books to confirm causes and symptoms, after first reports of the disease came in.

Dengue is more commonly found in South East Asia – but this year, it has rampaged across India with scores hospitalised. There have been at least 93 confirmed dengue deaths in India over the past six weeks.

Abdul Majeed, an official in the Sindh health department, told IRIN: "the situation is being closely monitored and we have set up special centers in hospitals."

The warning signals from India and Sindh however do not appear to have been heeded by the government in the Punjab. Sources in the Punjab health department conceded they were taken "unaware" by the first reported cases, and struggled to devise a strategy.

"Dengue is often mistaken for flu, at least at first. Then the more severe symptoms, such as joint pain, eye pain, muscular aches and nausea usually strike," Dr Asad Munir, a physician in Lahore, told IRIN

As the virus from infected mosquitoes expands its hold across Pakistan, Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz has called for "International experts to be consulted" to help cope with the situation. The Chief Minister of the Punjab province, Chaudhry Pervez Ellahi, is also reported to have sought daily situation reports on the dengue situation to be provided to him.
 
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Right on!

My 3 cousins infected in Pakistan. I wonder how bad is it out there.

Whats the cause? :what:
 
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The reason I posted this Article is that I want to know more about the health care system in Pakistan.

One of my mom's friend went to Pakistan (Karachi), her 6 year old son got this fever. He fell victim to this virus and died. [ May Allah rest his soul]

How is the health care infrastructure in Pakistan? how are they coping with this epidemic? what measures are being taken to prevent the spread of this virus?

where are the modernization talks of the health-care system? we hear a lot about buying J-10's and F-16's but we cant defend the public against this disease? [different priorities maybe?!]
 
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Yeah i have to say I have generally been unimpressed by the state of the health care system.

I have lost an aunt (who was not treated by doctors until money was provided) and several younger cousins because of the system. While a system like the NHS (national health service) would be hard to maintain in a large and populous nation such as Pakistan. Something needs to be done for the poorer elements of the country. At the very least state sponsored free clinics for the people, who are the most vunerable to illness.
 
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In pakistan, if you are rich then we have one of the best health care systems in the world. But if you are a average pakistani then our health care system is like one of thsoe underdevloped countries. My friend just came from pakisan and he says that doctors in villages still use one needle to inject more then one patients. So that's probabley is the reason why diaiseas like HEP C are so fast spreading in pakistan.
 
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They were showing officials spraying in Karachi on OMNI News South Asian Edition. We ought to improve sanitation or we shall keep getting epidemics.
 
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Spraying is a short term solution that imposes longer term costs because the mozzi's develop resistance to chemicals and then require even stronger chemicals to destroy them. What is required is a comprehensive program of subsidizing mosquitoe nets, allocating more funds to improve the drainage of water so that it doesnt collect in a pool and inititiate an educational drive that informs people of the dangers of mosquitoe breeding and encourages reduction in water pooling in an area.

Poverty should not be an excuse in this case. After all this is not simply a payment for an expensive disease that is internalised by a person, for e.g. if someone's knee is destroyed and they need a knee replacement while there may be a moral duty for society to provide the treatment there is not an economic imperative to do so. The fact that Pakistani's can not get knee replacements at hospitals is thus excusasable for a poor nation.

The situation of mosquitoes and dengue fever is completely different, when a person empties a drum that had mosquitoes breeding in it, he derives a small benefit in that the chance of him being infected goes down. However everyone in the neighbourhood also benefits. Secondly when a sick child has dengue fever it is not the same as knee replacement because if left untreated it increases chance that others will contract it if mosquitoe bites him and then bites a healthy person. Treating an infected person has an external benefit.

The external benefits that come about from draining puddles and treating infected people calls for public taxation and subsidization of both activities. In fact interventions because of external benefits and costs is the only major economic reason for the existence of government. The government can tax people and then subsidize treatment of infectious disease and water drainage.

The failure of the government to provide such activities is a fundamental failure and inexcusable, unlike a knee replacement which can be considered a luxury medical treatment.
 
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Dengue and dengue haemorrhagic fever

Dengue is a mosquito-borne infection which in recent years has become a major international public health concern. Dengue is found in tropical and sub-tropical regions around the world, predominantly in urban and semi-urban areas.

Dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF), a potentially lethal complication, was first recognized in the 1950s during the dengue epidemics in the Philippines and Thailand, but today DHF affects most Asian countries and has become a leading cause of hospitalisation and death among children in several of them.

There are four distinct, but closely related, viruses that cause dengue. Recovery from infection by one provides lifelong immunity against that serotype but confers only partial and transient protection against subsequent infection by the other three. There is good evidence that sequential infection increases the risk of more serious disease resulting in DHF.

Prevalence

The global prevalence of dengue has grown dramatically in recent decades. The disease is now endemic in more than 100 countries in Africa, the Americas, the Eastern Mediterranean, South-east Asia and the Western Pacific. South-east Asia and the Western Pacific are most seriously affected. Before 1970 only nine countries had experienced DHF epidemics, a number that had increased more than four-fold by 1995.

Some 2500 million people -- two fifths of the world's population -- are now at risk from dengue. WHO currently estimates there may be 50 million cases of dengue infection worldwide every year.

In 2001 alone, there were more than 609 000 reported cases of dengue in the Americas, of which 15 000 cases were DHF. This is greater than double the number of dengue cases which were recorded in the same region in 1995.

Not only is the number of cases increasing as the disease is spreading to new areas, but explosive outbreaks are occurring. In 2001, Brazil reported over 390 000 cases including more than 670 cases of DHF.

Some other statistics:

During epidemics of dengue, attack rates among susceptibles are often 40 -- 50%, but may reach 80 -- 90%.
An estimated 500 000 cases of DHF require hospitalisation each year, of whom a very large proportion are children. At least 2.5% of cases die, although case fatality could be twice as high.
Without proper treatment, DHF case fatality rates can exceed 20%. With modern intensive supportive therapy, such rates can be reduced to less than 1%.
The spread of dengue is attributed to expanding geographic distribution of the four dengue viruses and of their mosquito vectors, the most important of which is the predominantly urban species Aedes aegypti. A rapid rise in urban populations is bringing ever greater numbers of people into contact with this vector, especially in areas that are favourable for mosquito breeding, e.g. where household water storage is common and where solid waste disposal services are inadequate.

Transmission

Dengue viruses are transmitted to humans through the bites of infective female Aedes mosquitoes. Mosquitoes generally acquire the virus while feeding on the blood of an infected person. After virus incubation for 8-10 days, an infected mosquito is capable, during probing and blood feeding, of transmitting the virus, to susceptible individuals for the rest of its life. Infected female mosquitoes may also transmit the virus to their offspring by transovarial (via the eggs) transmission, but the role of this in sustaining transmission of virus to humans has not yet been delineated.

Humans are the main amplifying host of the virus, although studies have shown that in some parts of the world monkeys may become infected and perhaps serve as a source of virus for uninfected mosquitoes. The virus circulates in the blood of infected humans for two to seven days, at approximately the same time as they have fever; Aedes mosquitoes may acquire the virus when they feed on an individual during this period.

Characteristics

Dengue fever is a severe, flu-like illness that affects infants, young children and adults, but seldom causes death.

The clinical features of dengue fever vary according to the age of the patient. Infants and young children may have a non-specific febrile illness with rash. Older children and adults may have either a mild febrile syndrome or the classical incapacitating disease with abrupt onset and high fever, severe headache, pain behind the eyes, muscle and joint pains, and rash.

Dengue haemorrhagic fever is a potentially deadly complication that is characterized by high fever, haemorrhagic phenomena--often with enlargement of the liver--and in severe cases, circulatory failure. The illness commonly begins with a sudden rise in temperature accompanied by facial flush and other non-specific constitutional symptoms of dengue fever. The fever usually continues for two to seven days and can be as high as 40-41°C, possibly with febrile convulsions and haemorrhagic phenomena.

In moderate DHF cases, all signs and symptoms abate after the fever subsides. In severe cases, the patient's condition may suddenly deteriorate after a few days of fever; the temperature drops, followed by signs of circulatory failure, and the patient may rapidly go into a critical state of shock and die within 12-24 hours, or quickly recover following appropriate volume replacement therapy.

Treatment

There is no specific treatment for dengue fever. However, careful clinical management by experienced physicians and nurses frequently saves the lives of DHF patients. With appropriate intensive supportive therapy, mortality may be reduced to less than 1%. Maintenance of the circulating fluid volume is the central feature of DHF case management.

Immunization

Vaccine development for dengue and DHF is difficult because any of four different viruses may cause disease, and because protection against only one or two dengue viruses could actually increase the risk of more serious disease. Nonetheless, progress is being made in the development of vaccines that may protect against all four dengue viruses. Such products may become available for public health use within several years.

Prevention and control

At present, the only method of controlling or preventing dengue and DHF is to combat the vector mosquitoes.

In Asia and the Americas, Aedes aegypti breeds primarily in man-made containers like earthenware jars, metal drums and concrete cisterns used for domestic water storage, as well as discarded plastic food containers, used automobile tyres and other items that collect rainwater. In Africa it also breeds extensively in natural habitats such as tree holes and leaf axils.

In recent years, Aedes albopictus, a secondary dengue vector in Asia, has become established in: the United States, several Latin American and Caribbean countries, in parts of Europe and in one African country. The rapid geographic spread of this species has been largely attributed to the international trade in used tyres.

Vector control is implemented using environmental management and chemical methods. Proper solid waste disposal and improved water storage practices, including covering containers to prevent access by egg laying female mosquitoes are among methods that are encouraged through community-based programmes.

The application of appropriate insecticides to larval habitats, particularly those which are considered useful by the householders, e.g. water storage vessels, prevent mosquito breeding for several weeks but must be re-applied periodically. Small, mosquito-eating fish and copepods (tiny crustaceans) have also been used with some success. During outbreaks, emergency control measures may also include the application of insecticides as space sprays to kill adult mosquitoes using portable or truck-mounted machines or even aircraft. However, the killing effect is only transient, variable in its effectiveness because the aerosol droplets may not penetrate indoors to microhabitats where adult mosquitoes are sequestered, and the procedure is costly and operationally very demanding. Regular monitoring of the vectors' susceptibility to the most widely used insecticides is necessary to ensure the appropriate choice of chemicals. Active monitoring and surveillance of the natural mosquito population should accompany control efforts in order to determine the impact of the programme.


RELATED LINKS

- Dengue haemorrhagic fever: diagnosis, treatment, prevention and control
Information on dengue, including a list of those countries where outbreaks have occurred
- Dengue

For more information contact:


WHO Media centre
Telephone: +41 22 791 2222
E-mail: mediainquiries@who.int


For your information. Dengue Haermorrhagic fever can really be nasty. I gather there was an epidemic in Baluchistan in the late 80s which killed quite a few people.
Araz
 
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KARACHI: The number of total cases of suspected Viral Hemorrhagic Fever (VHF) admitted to different hospitals across the country, rose Wednesday to 2350.

Focal Person, Sindh Surveillance Committee for VHF and Dengue, Dr. Abdul Majid said here Wednesday evening that the new admissions of 82 patients has brought the total number of suspected VHF cases, in Sindh, to 2039, since June this year.

"These 2039 include 73 dengue positive cases," he said.

It was also mentioned that 261 of the - either confirmed Dengue or suspected VHF, in need of special care, remained admitted to different hospitals of Karachi and in one located at Hyderabad during last 24 hours.

"While 82 new cases suspected cases were admitted 79 were discharged after full recovery the same day i.e. Wednesday," Dr. Majid said.

Those who died falling victim to the virus, since June, include 27 in Karachi and three in other parts of the province including Sukkur, Hyderabad and Tharparkar/ Mirpurkhas.

Dr. Abdul who is also the Additional Health Secretary, Sindh answering a question said cases have also been reported from Larkana besides other parts of Sindh.

23 suspected cases were reported from Larkana, Hyderabad, Sukkur, Tharparkar/Mirpurkhas respectively and eight are still hospitalized while 10 of the suspected cases were found to be confirmed Dengue.

Four new cases were reported from Hyderabad only on Wednesday besides those from Karachi, Dr. Abdul Majid said mentioning that three deaths were reported during last five months from interior Sindh.

The new admissions made on Wednesday include three at Aga Khan Hospital, six at Liaquat National, nine at Civil Hospital - Karachi, 11at Ziauddin Hospital, 15 at Jinnah Post Graduate Medical Center, 13 at Bismillah Taqee, two at National Institute of Child Health, 14 at Abbasi Shaheed, two at Baqai Hospital, two at Zain ul Abedein, three at Patel Hospital, two at Darul Shifa, 10 at Chiniot Hospital and four at Civil Hospital, Hyderabad.

The number of affected people in Islamabad, Rawalpindi is 96, out of which 55 belong to Rawalpindi and 41 belong to Islamabad.
 
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To answer on the health care system. It is pretty good, but the problem is that people here are reluctant to go to the doctors, since they see that as a sign of weakiness. Also the state in the rural areas is such that there may be just one hospital serving sevral villages (under law there is supposed to be a doctor for a certain number of people not for an area(.

Also Dengue was thought eradicated form Pakistan in the 1970's, as a result the health care system was not prepared to tackle such a pandemic. Hell we had zero reserves of DDT and other substances.
 
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