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Possible Drivers of the 2019 Dengue Outbreak in Bangladesh: The Need for a Robust Community-Level Surveillance System

Atik Ahsan, Najmul Haider, Richard Kock, Camilla T. O. Benfield

2020Journal of Medical Entomology39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Bangladesh experienced its largest dengue virus (DENV) outbreak in 2019, with 101,354 patients admitted to hospital with either laboratory-confirmed or clinical diagnosis. By contrast, the cumulative number of dengue patients admitted to hospitals in the previous 19 yr (2000–2018) was 50,674 (Institute of Epidemiology Disease Control and Research 2019). Herein, we discuss the potential drivers contributing to the unprecedented 2019 DENV outbreak in Bangladesh. Dengue fever is caused by four serotypically distinct dengue viruses (DENV-1 to DENV-4) that are transmitted by Aedes spp mosquitoes. Infection with one serotype does not protect against another, except for the first few months after infection (Sabin 1952). Since 2000, Bangladesh has reported DENV cases every year before the 2019 surge (Fig. 1). However, under-reporting was highly likely because previous reports only included data from a select number of government hospitals and private clinics (Directorate General of Health...

Topics & Concepts

Dengue feverOutbreakDengue virusSerotypeEpidemiologyAedesVirologyEnvironmental healthDisease surveillanceBiologyMedicineInternal medicineMosquito-borne diseases and controlMalaria Research and ControlViral Infections and Vectors
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