среда, 29 февраля 2012 г.
Fed: Dengue outbreak likely this summer: expert
AAP General News (Australia)
08-22-2007
Fed: Dengue outbreak likely this summer: expert
By Tamara McLean, Medical Writer
SYDNEY, Aug 22 AAP - Northern Australia has been warned to brace for an outbreak of
dengue fever this summer following an epidemic of the virus in neighbouring Asian countries.
A rash of the mosquito-borne illness has swept Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Cambodia
and Vietnam, with more than 133,000 cases and 850 deaths reported so far this year.
Infectious diseases experts have warned the outbreak does not bode well for Australia,
which has historically imported all its most problematic fever strains from Asia.
"Given what's going on in the (regional) neighbourhood, the chances are we're going
to get a lot of activity this year," said Associate Professor John Aaskov, from Queensland
University of Technology.
"The extensive two-way travel between Australia and countries to our north ensures
that dengue viruses are being constantly introduced into Australia with travellers."
Statistics from the federal Department of Health and Ageing show there have been 198
cases of dengue fever reported this year, already exceeding last year's total of 188,
before the worst summer months.
Prof Aaskov said it was impossible to predict whether Australia would repeat the epidemic
of 2003 when 860 cases were reported, mostly in Queensland.
But he warned numbers would likely climb if travellers imported strains 1 or 2 of the
potentially-fatal virus.
The risk was heightened by changing trends in the way dengue outbreaks occurred in Asia.
"Typically, South-East Asian countries experience major outbreaks of dengue one year
in every three to five, but the outbreaks now commonly spread over two years," Prof Aaskov
said.
Experts are unsure why the outbreaks were getting larger but believe it may be triggered
by rural residents relocating to large cities where they often end up living in squatter
camps with no fresh water or garbage disposal.
"This leads to the storage of water in containers in which mosquitoes can breed and
to the collection of water in discarded waste which are also ideal mosquito breeding sites,"
he said.
Prof Aaskov warned Australians planning to travel to South-East Asia to be "mosquito aware".
Several vaccines are undergoing trials, but as yet there is no jab to protect against the virus.
AAP tam/jm/cdh
KEYWORD: DENGUE
2007 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
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