Burma: dengue outbreak feared
  • Source: http://www.irrawaddy.org/highlight.php?art_id=13163
    Dengue Fever Outbreak Feared
    By VIOLET CHO Monday, July 7, 2008

    Dengue fever—a mosquito-borne disease that peaks during the rainy season—is likely to strike harder this year in Burma due to Cyclone Nargis, according to sources within the medical community in Rangoon.

    Some medical staff in Rangoon said that cases of dengue fever have already broken out in populated areas of the city, especially cases involving children. A doctor who asked not to be named said that 80 percent of children admitted to her downtown Rangoon clinic were diagnosed with dengue fever.

    “More babies, children and old people are affected by dengue this rainy season,” said the doctor. “Poor people from cyclone-hit areas are especially affected. Some of them cannot even afford mosquito nets to protect themselves from this fast-spreading disease.”

    Dengue fever is a flu-like illness spread by the bite of an infected mosquito. Unlike mosquitoes that cause malaria, those carrying dengue bite during the day. The disease is especially dangerous in children and the elderly, who have little resistance and often die of internal bleeding. It normally takes its greatest toll in Burma in the rainy season, which began in June.

    To date, however, no deaths from dengue fever have been reported this rainy season.
    According to medical staff in the former capital, a serious outbreak of dengue fever could follow if the municipality fails to destroy the mosquitoes’ breeding grounds—mainly pools of stagnant water.

    Mee Mee, an assistant nurse working at a private clinic in Yankin Township in Rangoon said, “Almost all the main drains in Rangoon are clogged up by debris after the cyclone, but the authorities don’t appear to have any plan to clear them up.”

    One of Burma’s official newspapers, The New Light of Myanmar, reported on Monday that authorities have begun prevention work against outbreaks of dengue fever in two populated Rangoon townships.

    The report said that measures are being taken to combat dengue fever and that government medical teams are providing education and awareness on the disease at primary schools and community centers in Thakayta and Dagon Myothit-South townships.

    According to the Burmese health ministry, dengue fever killed almost 100 children in the country in the first seven months of 2007.

    Meanwhile, international health organizations such as the World Health Organization (WHO) and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), in cooperation with the Myanmar Maternal and Child Welfare Association and the Myanmar Red Cross, have launched a US $700,000 anti-dengue-fever campaign in 11 storm-hit townships in Rangoon and Irrawaddy divisions.

    According to the WHO, there were 781 registered dengue patients in Rangoon Division and 481 in Irrawaddy Division as of the end of May.

    The state media reported no outbreak of other contagious and epidemic diseases in the storm-hit areas, saying that a total of 206,039 cyclone victims had received medical treatment since early May.

    Meanwhile, Burmese local doctors and medical workers are being invited by the Myanmar Medical Association (MMA) to provide free long-term medical treatment to cyclone victims, according to The New light of Myanmar.


  • Myitkyina hospital full of Dengue patients http://bnionline.net/templates/rt_sporticus_news/images/printButton.png (http://bnionline.net/index2.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4624&pop=1&page=0&Itemid=1) http://bnionline.net/templates/rt_sporticus_news/images/emailButton.png (http://bnionline.net/index2.php?option=com_content&task=emailform&id=4624&itemid=1)
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    Saturday, 02 August 2008
    Children suffering from Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF) are crowding the Myitkyina Public Hospital in Kachin State 's capital Myitkyina in Northern Burma , hospital sources said.

    There is now no place to admit new patients in the children's ward in the hospital because it already has over 80 DHF child patients. However, the hospital has officially declared that it has about 20 patients detected with the DHF disease following blood examination, said a hospital staff to KNG today.

    Since last week, five or more patients who are not in a serious condition, though affected by DHF, have been attending the hospital for medication every day, a duty health worker in the children's ward told KNG.

    A woman eyewitness told KNG today, this morning she saw that some patients were outside the children's ward free space and corridors because the ward is full with DHF child patients.

    A nurse in the hospital said, "The number of DHF child patients have suddenly gone up this week in the hospital and most patients are between the ages two and 14. The patients are suffering from high fever which is not declining. The patients have been mainly diagnosed with malaria and are being treated with antibiotics."

    However, all the cost of medicines has to be paid by the patients and they also have to pay 5,000 Kyat (US $4.2) per night when they hire a health staff in the hospital for taking care of them, according to hospital sources.

    Sometimes, the health personnel have been coming to the aid of patients who do not have money to buy medicines. They are collecting the cost of medicines from among themselves in the hospital, added a hospital staff.

    Meanwhile, private clinics in Myitkyina are also full with Malaria and DHF patients. The military authorities, however, are yet to take action despite the serious condition arising out of DHF in the township, said residents of Myitkyina.

    Residents added, the DHF disease is serious and the infection is caused by mosquito bites. Mainly children are affected in Myitkyina because the military authorities in the township are yet to take up proper Malaria prevention programmes this rainy season.

    Last year during this time, there were very few patients who came to Myitkyina Pubic Hospital with Malaria and DHF diseases, according to hospital sources. :tiphat: http://bnionline.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4624&Itemid=1







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