Английская Википедия:2017 dengue outbreak in Sri Lanka

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In the 2017 dengue epidemic in Sri Lanka, a rise in the number of dengue fever cases was reported on the island country of Sri Lanka. The peak of the outbreak was in the mid-year monsoon rain season, when there was record of over 40,000 cases in July. This figure was far beyond the historical highest number of cases per month in Sri Lanka. Year end total dengue cases rose to 186,101.

Most cases (43%) were recorded in Western Province urban areas such as the Colombo district (table 1).[1] Most dengue cases were young people and school children. Year end Sri Lanka's total dengue related deaths was 440.

The Government of Sri Lanka spend more than US$12 million on outbreak control and was supported by NGOs such as the Red Cross.[2][3][4]<mapframe latitude="8.581021" longitude="80.859375" zoom="2" width="362" height="189" align="center" />

Table 1 - Dengue Cases by Three Exemplar Districts (2017)[5]
District January February March April May June July August September October November December Total
Colombo 2,734 1,900 2,467 2,570 3,333 5,372 7,471 3,620 1,251 823 1,131 1,602 34,274
Gampaha 1,635 1,087 1,870 2,072 3,168 4,901 9,039 3,553 1,246 779 1,078 1,219 31,647
Kalutara 581 448 836 739 946 1,248 2,612 1,477 663 337 528 546 10,961

Background

In 2017 Sri Lanka experienced its largest neglected tropical disease outbreak of dengue fever since the first recorded Sri Lankan case in 1962.[6][7][8] This biological hazard, transmitted via female mosquito bites, caused 186,101 dengue cases, significantly higher than in previous years (table 2), and 440 deaths.[3][9][10]

Table 2 - Annual Dengue Case Numbers from 2010-2022, Sri Lanka[11]
Year 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
Annual Dengue Cases 34,188 28,473 44,461 32,063 47,502 29,777 50,592 186,101 51,659 105,049 31,162 25,067 51,005 (Jan-Oct)


Sri Lanka's Ministry of Health (MoH) reported a rise in cases from January, with the highest number of cases reported in July (table 3).[11] Most cases were recorded in the west and north of the country, specifically in the urban Colombo district.[3]

Table 3 - 2017 Monthly Dengue Cases, Sri Lanka[11]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Reported Dengue Case Numbers 10,927 8,724 13,540 12,540 15,963 25,319 41,121 22,270 9,519 6,614 8,868 10,753

Causes

Climate

  • Sri Lanka's tropical climate offers prime mosquito breeding conditions.[12]
  • The 2017 monsoon rains (May–August) coincided with the peak of the dengue outbreak (table 2). Triggering floods and disrupting refuse collection, increasing mosquito breedings sites.[8][13]
  • However, annual rainfall and El Nino conditions were lower on average than previous years, suggesting that climate was not completely responsible for the outbreak.[3]

Political

Socio-economic

Short- and long-term impacts

Short-term impacts

  • Unexpected high death toll.[8]
  • Disruption to workplaces, household income, and education as the majority of cases were of people aged 10–29.[3]
  • Direct and indirect impacts of the dengue outbreak affected 600,000 people, in all 25 districts, prominently in urban areas.[1] However, some districts may have been under-reported due to ethnic marginalisation and the presence of IDP camps.[18][20]
  • Dengue treatment strained national economic resources costing Sri Lanka US $12.7 million (LKR 1.938 billion).[3]

Long-term impacts

  • Today dengue cases are declining in Sri Lanka, with 25,067 total cases in 2021 (table 1).[11]
  • Dengue is still present with new strains (serotypes DENV-3 and DENV-4) becoming more prominent threatening future outbreaks.[15]
  • Combined with the COVID-19 pandemic there is still immense pressures on healthcare and trade networks.[21]
  • 2022 has seen an economic crisis and severe food insecurity in Sri Lanka, the dengue outbreak would be a contributing factor.[22][23]

Futures

Climate change models suggest that Sri Lanka's climate is becoming more conducive to mosquito breeding, this combined with economic instability could trigger a future epidemic.[23][24] There is a possibility of a cycle of disease, poverty and food insecurity which may be challenging to break.[25] However, this could be mitigated if the MoH, supported by institutions like WHO, engage in proactive strategies.[21] At the cost of US$78 per person a licensed vaccine is now available Dengvaxia® (CYD-TDV) with five more in development.[21] However, Sri Lanka's current expenditure is US$161 per capita on healthcare (2021), the vaccine is a significant proportion of that budget and in uncertain economic times may not be a priority.[26][27]

See also

External links

References