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 Post subject: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Wed Jul 14, 2010 3:10 pm 
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Is Dengue a real concern?....I don't remember reading such stories as the one below from Insidecostarica newspaper.




Santa Cruz Festival Cancelled Due To Dengue

The Dengue epidemic is the reason for the Ministerio de Salud (Health Ministry) decision to cancel the "Fiestas de Santa Cruz" for this year. Of the 12.143 cases of Dengue nationwide, 3.245 are recorded in the area, 826 alone in the town of Santa Cruz.

The vice-ministra de Salud, Ana Morice, said the epidemic is centred in the Chorotega region and it "un-necessary" to expose the population to the area where the Dengue is concentrated.

The Santa Cruz festival was programmed to run between July 22 and 25.

Vice-ministra Morice added that an increase in Dengue is also occurring in the Gran Área Metropolitana (GAM) - San José - especially in the area of Pavas where 110 cases are suspected, where 30% of the cases are centred in the community of Villa Esperanza de Pavas between last week and this.

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 Post subject: Re: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Wed Jul 14, 2010 6:59 pm 
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article about the Keys....Dengue there too


As South Floridians motor to the Keys for summer vacation, health officials on Tuesday urged caution about the persistent presence of mosquito-borne dengue fever in Key West.

Doctors have logged 14 cases in the old town since April — two last week — after an outbreak of 27 cases last fall marked the first time since 1945 that someone got the virus in the continental United States.

No one has died, and most people don't even get sick when infected with dengue, officials said in Tuesday's report from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But it's the first time the virus has returned for a second U.S. outbreak in the same place.

Most experts thought it would not be back, but here it is. It has come back," said Carina Blackmore, a Florida Department of Health expert on mosquito diseases who helped write the CDC report. "We all need to be careful."

That includes the 3.3 million tourists who visit the Keys each year, 35 percent of whom are from Florida and a large share of whom come from South Florida.

Officials said tourists have little to worry about as long as they take basic precautions against bug bites: Stay indoors from dusk to dawn, wear long sleeves and pants if outside at those times, use repellent with the chemical DEET and eliminate even small pools of standing water where the bugs breed.

"I don't think people have to worry about coming to Key West. They should be aware of the outbreak, but if they stay in a hotel with air conditioning and take simple steps, their risk should be absolutely minimal," said Dr. Mark Whiteside, medical director at the Monroe County Health Department.

Aside from dengue, three horses in South Florida have died from mosquito-borne encephalitis, and a few chickens have tested positive for West Nile virus. All three diseases are carried by different mosquitoes, but officials said the need for caution is clear.

Dengue fever infects about 50 million people worldwide and kills 25,000. The symptoms can include fever, aches, pains, rash, upset stomach and vomiting. Two of those infected in the Keys were hospitalized.

Last fall, health officials took blood samples from 240 Key West residents and reported Tuesday that 5 percent had been exposed to dengue. Blackmore said the number probably has gone up.

There's little risk of the carrier mosquito — Aegus aegypti — venturing off the island. Blackmore said the species generally stays close to home. But a risk is that a visitor could get infected and then be bitten by mosquitoes at home, spreading dengue to a new locale.

"We're concerned that if dengue gains a foothold in Key West, it will travel to other southern cities where the mosquito that transmits dengue is present, like Miami" and the rest of South Florida, said Harold Margolis, dengue chief at the CDC.

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 Post subject: Re: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Thu Jul 15, 2010 3:42 pm 
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and here is a miami herald story about dade county



The first suspected locally acquired case of dengue fever in Miami-Dade County was reported Thursday by county health officials. A viral disease that afflicts 100 million worldwide every year, it hadn't been seen in Florida since 1934.

``Dengue is a viral disease transmitted by a breed of mosquito common to the southeastern United States and the tropics,'' the Miami-Dade Health Department said in a news release. ``It is not spread from person to person. More than 100 million cases of dengue occur every year worldwide.''

Symptoms include a high fever, severe headache with pain behind the eyes, a rash and pain in bones and joints, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. There is no vaccine, and doctors treat mainly symptoms. It is seldom fatal except to the very young and elderly with other health conditions.

Health workers urged residents to protect themselves by avoiding the outdoors at dusk and dawn, wearing clothing that protects the body, applying mosquito repellent that contains DEET and draining all open containers of water from porches and patios.

The Miami-Dade announcement came as Key West health officials also found a second small outbreak in Key West.

``I don't want people to think they have to stay indoors,'' said Bob Eadie, administrator of the Monroe County Health Department, ``but at the same time, I don't want to minimize it.''

Key West had 27 cases in 2009 in an outbreak that stopped with the end of mosquito season in mid-October. But since April of this year, 16 new cases have been confirmed.

On Tuesday, a warning was issued by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. ``We're concerned that if dengue gains a foothold in Key West, it will travel to other southern cities where the mosquito that transmits dengue is present, like Miami,'' Harold Margolis, chief of CDC's dengue branch, said in the report.

Margolis characterized the new cases as representing ``the reemergence of dengue fever in Florida and elsewhere in the U.S. after 75 years.'' He noted that those infected had not traveled outside Florida, ``so we need to determine if these cases are an isolated occurrence or if dengue has once again become endemic in the continental U.S.''

Until now, Miami-Dade had had very few cases of dengue fever -- and all of them had been among people who had traveled outside the United States to countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, Conte said.

In February, Puerto Rico declared an epidemic of the disease, with more than 200 cases reported in January alone, and three deaths by mid-June.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/07/15/1 ... z0tmXehOfo

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 Post subject: Re: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Mon Jul 19, 2010 4:59 pm 
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today's article in tico times

Dengue Exploding Countrywide

By Chrissie Long
Tico Times Staff | clong@ticotimes.net

Anti-malarial pills were once a must in visitors' suitcases alongside the Hawaiian shirts and guidebooks, especially if the itinerary called for travel to Costa Rica's southern and Atlantic regions.

But today's record-high dengue infections have made it the most dreaded mosquito-borne disease.

Dengue's porters, the Aedes aegypti mosquito, have caused a 408 percent surge in Latin American cases during first six months of 2010 over the same period last year. In Costa Rica, 10,788 cases have been reported from January-June, nearly 4,000 more than all of 2009.

While the effects of dengue aren't as severe as its mosquito-transmitted sister malaria, it can be deadly. In Costa Rica, 19 people have died of dengue since 1993, with one death so far in 2010.

Dengue has had outbreaks in Costa Rica every two or three years: 2005 was the worst in the past decade with 37,798 cases nationwide, followed by 2007, with 26,504 cases and 2003, which saw 19,703.

Rodrigo Marín, national dengue control coordinator, said the disease is emerging where it hasn't existed before, which means many people are not aware they are at risk. The combination of 2010's hot summer with an early rainy season is proving a serendipitous recipe for the aegypti's population explosion.

“Weather conditions have been very flattering to the proliferation of the vector Aedes aegypti (mosquito) … and the Central American sub-region … is already seeing an increase in dengue transmission that can potentially affect large population groups,” read a July 7 World Health Organization outbreak alert.

In past years, Costa Rica's Pacific and Caribbean coastal regions and low-lying areas have typically been the hardest hit by dengue. But this year, the Central Valley has seen a record 2,000 dengue cases.

Few Costa Rican regions have seen an outbreak like Santa Cruz on the Nicoya Peninsula in the northwestern Guanacaste province. The sparsely populated area has already reported more than 2,000 cases, prompting the cancellation of next weekend's Annexation Day festivities whose bull runs are popular with tourists. Health officials want to avoid an influx of people to the area due to the high concentration of infected mosquitoes that may bite visitors and further increase the disease's spread to other parts of the country.

Juan Luis Sánchez, regional medical director for the health ministry said, “We are hoping the actions the Health Ministry is taking will achieve their desired result.” Sánchez's office is based inside the small Santa Cruz government clinic that has recently been seeing up to 70 dengue patients a day.

Guanacaste's seasonal dry conditions mean that farms and homes regularly store water as a reserve for water shortages. And clean, standing water is the preferred breeding environment for the aegypti mosquitoes.

Malaria vs. Dengue

Malaria, a serious, sometimes fatal disease, is treatable with medicine and also readily prevented by anti-malarial pills taken before and during visits to risk areas. Also, since its vector, the Anopheles albinus mosquito, tends to bite at night and prefers rural, unpopulated areas, sleeping under a mosquito net at night helps to prevent infection.

Dengue's carriers, on the other hand, tend to bite during the day and proliferate in urban settings. In dengue risk areas, prevention involves active and consistent measures including wearing long-sleeved shirts and long pants, and using insect repellent. Napping with a net is also important, since the aegypti bite during the day (see information box).

Malaria has waned here because of controls over the anopheles mosquito, according to Marín, the national dengue control coordinator. From a high of nearly 7,000 malaria cases reported by the Health Ministry in 1992, malaria has nearly been eliminated in Costa Rica.

“Costa Rica is actually in a state of pre-eradication (when it comes to malaria), with only 72 cases this year,” Marín said.

As for dengue, Marín said many cases go unreported, as there is not one specific telltale symptom or reaction to dengue. Sometimes it's high fever, other times its body aches or vomiting, sometimes it's a sharp pain behind the eye, and symptoms vary according to a person's age, with young Ch*ldren usually affected more mildly than adults.

For Jerry “Bubba” Hallstrom, known for his popular fishing report (often published in this paper), it was high fevers with mild hallucinations, sweats, chills, no energy and no appetite that led him to seek medical attention.

“Dengue is one of the worst things I have had to get over,” said Hallstrom, a resident of Jacó, who has now had it twice. “It makes you realize how strong people are who have to live in pain every day because of chemotherapy or other illnesses.”

Hallstrom never felt a bite, doesn't remember being bit, and said he is at a loss as to how to protect himself in the future.

“You can keep your yard free from mosquito puddles, but you can't do anything about your neighbors' yard or your neighbors' neighbors' yard,” he said.

So for travelers used to arming themselves with pills as they head to the tropics, guarding against dengue will take a lot more work and presence of mind.

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 Post subject: Re: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Tue Jul 20, 2010 8:43 pm 
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Dengue is Overblown. You won't DIE from it. It least not LIKELY to. Had Malaria while living in the Congo and that too was overblown. Sure you'll feel really sick for a bit but the VAST majority of people, especially of you have access to decent health care, will get over it.


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 Post subject: Re: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Tue Jul 20, 2010 10:01 pm 
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BondTrader wrote:
Dengue is Overblown. You won't DIE from it. It least not LIKELY to. Had Malaria while living in the Congo and that too was overblown. Sure you'll feel really sick for a bit but the VAST majority of people, especially of you have access to decent health care, will get over it.


Yes the death rate of dengue is low and the death rate from dengue hemorrhagic fever while significantly higher is less then some other diseases. That being said to say "Dengue is overblown" is ridiculous. Here are the words of a victim:

Quote:
For Jerry “Bubba” Hallstrom, known for his popular fishing report (often published in this paper), it was high fevers with mild hallucinations, sweats, chills, no energy and no appetite that led him to seek medical attention.

“Dengue is one of the worst things I have had to get over,” said Hallstrom, a resident of Jacó, who has now had it twice. “It makes you realize how strong people are who have to live in pain every day because of chemotherapy or other illnesses.”


You can get over dengue and malaria but both can also kill you. You can get over a heart attack, cancer, and numerous other things but they also can kill you. Are they overblown? I am glad you where able to over come your malaria but it still has killed thousands. Just consider yourself lucky and show a little compassion for those less fortunate.

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 Post subject: Re: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Thu Jul 22, 2010 3:41 am 
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I had Dengue while on a trip to Colombia and it was not fun. It was a lot worse than the common Flu.

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 Post subject: Re: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Thu Jul 22, 2010 12:58 pm 
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where in Colombia?

did you get treatment there?

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 Post subject: Re: Dengue in CR
PostPosted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 4:35 am 
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Was in Cali and ended up in San Cipriano on the way to Buenaventura. You get off in Cordoba and take a hand pushed train cart to the area of San Cipriano deep in the jungle. I caught it somewhere on that trip and finally went back to Cali for treatment. Here is a link to the place, which is a lot of fun.

http://www.paisatours.com/san_cipriano.htm

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