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Dengue Situation in Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Shift in terms of Morbidity and Mortality

The escalating dengue situation in Bangladesh has been emerging as a serious public health problem in terms of morbidity and mortality. Results of analysis of 40,476 cases of Bangladesh occurring during 2000–2017 indicated that 49.73% of the dengue cases occurred during the monsoon season (May–Augus...

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Autores principales: Mutsuddy, Pulak, Tahmina Jhora, Sanya, Shamsuzzaman, Abul Khair Mohammad, Kaisar, S. M. Golam, Khan, Md Nasir Ahmed
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6431455/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30962860
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/3516284
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author Mutsuddy, Pulak
Tahmina Jhora, Sanya
Shamsuzzaman, Abul Khair Mohammad
Kaisar, S. M. Golam
Khan, Md Nasir Ahmed
author_facet Mutsuddy, Pulak
Tahmina Jhora, Sanya
Shamsuzzaman, Abul Khair Mohammad
Kaisar, S. M. Golam
Khan, Md Nasir Ahmed
author_sort Mutsuddy, Pulak
collection PubMed
description The escalating dengue situation in Bangladesh has been emerging as a serious public health problem in terms of morbidity and mortality. Results of analysis of 40,476 cases of Bangladesh occurring during 2000–2017 indicated that 49.73% of the dengue cases occurred during the monsoon season (May–August) and 49.22% during the post-monsoon season (September–December). However, data also showed that, since 2014, these trends have been changing, and dengue cases have been reported during the pre-monsoon season. During 2015–2017, in the pre-monsoon season, the dengue cases were reported to be more than seven times higher compared to the previous 14 years. The findings closely correlate with those of the pre-monsoon Aedes vector survey which revealed the presence of high density of larva and pupa of the dengue vectors in the environment all the year round. In our study, climate changes, such as average rainfall, humidity, and temperature, after 2014, and rapid unplanned urbanization were the strong predictors of an imbalance in the existing ecology that has led to increase in dengue cases in 2016 and the emergence of the chikungunya virus for the first time in Bangladesh in 2017. Although 2018 dengue data are relevant but not included in this study due to study time frame, it is interesting to report an increase in the number of dengue cases in pre (2016) and post (2018, which is highest within 18 years) chikungunya outbreak, which favors the study hypothesis. Despite the efforts to control dengue, based primarily on the vector control and case management, the burden and costs of the disease and similar vector-borne diseases will continue to grow in future in our country. Developing a cost-effective vaccine against all the 4 strains of dengue remains a challenge. The CDC, in collaboration with other research organizations, may come forward to initiate and coordinate a large-scale randomized clinical trial of an effective dengue vaccine in Bangladesh.
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spelling pubmed-64314552019-04-08 Dengue Situation in Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Shift in terms of Morbidity and Mortality Mutsuddy, Pulak Tahmina Jhora, Sanya Shamsuzzaman, Abul Khair Mohammad Kaisar, S. M. Golam Khan, Md Nasir Ahmed Can J Infect Dis Med Microbiol Research Article The escalating dengue situation in Bangladesh has been emerging as a serious public health problem in terms of morbidity and mortality. Results of analysis of 40,476 cases of Bangladesh occurring during 2000–2017 indicated that 49.73% of the dengue cases occurred during the monsoon season (May–August) and 49.22% during the post-monsoon season (September–December). However, data also showed that, since 2014, these trends have been changing, and dengue cases have been reported during the pre-monsoon season. During 2015–2017, in the pre-monsoon season, the dengue cases were reported to be more than seven times higher compared to the previous 14 years. The findings closely correlate with those of the pre-monsoon Aedes vector survey which revealed the presence of high density of larva and pupa of the dengue vectors in the environment all the year round. In our study, climate changes, such as average rainfall, humidity, and temperature, after 2014, and rapid unplanned urbanization were the strong predictors of an imbalance in the existing ecology that has led to increase in dengue cases in 2016 and the emergence of the chikungunya virus for the first time in Bangladesh in 2017. Although 2018 dengue data are relevant but not included in this study due to study time frame, it is interesting to report an increase in the number of dengue cases in pre (2016) and post (2018, which is highest within 18 years) chikungunya outbreak, which favors the study hypothesis. Despite the efforts to control dengue, based primarily on the vector control and case management, the burden and costs of the disease and similar vector-borne diseases will continue to grow in future in our country. Developing a cost-effective vaccine against all the 4 strains of dengue remains a challenge. The CDC, in collaboration with other research organizations, may come forward to initiate and coordinate a large-scale randomized clinical trial of an effective dengue vaccine in Bangladesh. Hindawi 2019-03-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6431455/ /pubmed/30962860 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/3516284 Text en Copyright © 2019 Pulak Mutsuddy et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mutsuddy, Pulak
Tahmina Jhora, Sanya
Shamsuzzaman, Abul Khair Mohammad
Kaisar, S. M. Golam
Khan, Md Nasir Ahmed
Dengue Situation in Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Shift in terms of Morbidity and Mortality
title Dengue Situation in Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Shift in terms of Morbidity and Mortality
title_full Dengue Situation in Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Shift in terms of Morbidity and Mortality
title_fullStr Dengue Situation in Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Shift in terms of Morbidity and Mortality
title_full_unstemmed Dengue Situation in Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Shift in terms of Morbidity and Mortality
title_short Dengue Situation in Bangladesh: An Epidemiological Shift in terms of Morbidity and Mortality
title_sort dengue situation in bangladesh: an epidemiological shift in terms of morbidity and mortality
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6431455/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30962860
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/3516284
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