DENGUE
PATROL ACTIVITIES
DAY 35 : 22
OCTOBER 2015 (THURSDAY)
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DATE
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DAY
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ACTIVITIES
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DAY 35
22/10/2015
THURSDAY
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Update Dengue
Patrol media social
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Sharing dengue
information with family members
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Dengue
fever, also known as breakbone fever,
is a mosquito-borne infection that causes a severe flu-like illness. There are
four different viruses that can cause dengue fever, all of which spread by a
certain type of mosquito.
Dengue
fever can vary from mild to severe; the more severe forms include dengue shock
syndrome and dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). Patients who develop the more
serious forms of dengue fever usually need to be hospitalized.
There
are currently no vaccines for dengue fever. The best way to prevent the disease
is to avoid being bitten by mosquitoes altogether. Although there is no certain
treatment for dengue, it can be treated as long as it is caught before developing
into dengue shock syndrome or dengue hemorrhagic fever.
A
study published in Nature (April 2013 issue) showed that there
are approximately 390 million people worldwide infected with the dengue virus
each year, over three times as many as the
World Health Organization's estimate of up to 100 million
Dengue fever can be commonly found in urban
parts of subtropical and tropical areas, such as Central and South America,
parts of Africa, parts of Asia, the Caribbean and the Pacific.
Dengue is just as prevalent in urban
districts of its range as in rural areas (unlike malaria). However, researchers from the Nagasaki Institute of
Tropical Medicine in Japan reported in PLoS Medicine (August 2011 issue)
that people living in rural areas have a higher risk of dengue
virus infection than city dwellers.
According to the World Health Organization
(WHO):
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Approximately
2.5 billion people, or two-fifths of the world's population, are now at risk
from dengue.
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The disease
is now endemic in over 100 countries.
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Dengue hemorrhagic
fever is a leading cause of serious illness and death among children in some
Asian countries.
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In 2007,
there were over 890,000 reported cases of dengue in the Americas, of which
26,000 cases were DHF.
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Dengue
infection rates among people who have not been previously exposed to the virus
are commonly 40% to 50% during epidemics, but may sometimes reach 80% to 90%.
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Approximately
half-a-million people with DHF are hospitalized each year, of whom many are
children. About 2.5% of these patients die.
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DHF fatality
reads may exceed 20% if untreated. If there is access to medical care with
health care professionals trained in treating DHF, the death rate may be less
than 1%.
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