| A
mosquito has the nation in panic. And for good reason. Mosquitoes,
often considered the scourge of the world, are transmitters
of some of the world’s deadliest diseases, such as malaria
and yellow fever.
The
mosquito making headlines in Pakistan these days, is a little
black and white mosquito, known as Aedes aegypti. Across the
country, people have become armchair experts, overnight entomologists,
well-versed in its characteristics and habits. Photos in the
press have familiarised citizens with the insect’s tiny
body and white markings. For it is her, the female Aedes, to
whom we owe no thanks for the country’s lastest health
crisis: dengue fever.
Dengue
fever is, however, nothing new to Pakistan. Outbreaks of the
tropical virus, including its more deadly form, dengue haemorrhagic
fever (DHF), have spread through Pakistan in previous years.
Just last year Pakistan experienced an outbreak. A surveillance
study done during July to October 2005 at CHK and Lyari General
Hospital screened 350 kids suffering from less than seven days
of fever. Four were found to be dengue positive and 11 children
were deemed indeterminate.
According
to Dr Tasneem Ahsan, head of medicine at the Jinnah Post Graduate
Center (JPMC) in Karachi, last year’s dengue outbreak
occured during the same time last year, but not to the same
extent. “This time it has been much worse with sporadic
cases witnessed even before the monsoon in July, but it peaked
around August,” she claims. “We started sending
the cases for dengue-testing to the National Institute for Health
(NIH) in Islamabad when we found six consecutive cases –
out of which one patient died.”
Although
local doctors raised the alarm around that time, concerns were
dismissed on the official level as “a phobia.” But
then the cases started escalating. “These days, anybody
with high-grade fever, chills and other symptoms is assumed
to be a dengue patient unless proven otherwise,” says
Ahsan.
Professor
D.S. Akram, head of the paediatric department at Civil Hospital
in Karachi, says that an outbreak of DHF was also reported in
Karachi in 1994. But the presence of dengue fever was found
in children in studies done by her as far back as 1980.
The bottom line? Dengue is not foreign to our shores. In fact,
the World Health Organisation (WHO) classifies dengue as endemic
in Pakistan.
Being
endemic means that the disease occurs continuously and with
predictable regularity within a specific area or population.
According to recent statistics, a total of 2,917 suspected cases
of dengue fever have so far been reported in hospitals across
the country. Of these, 1,066 cases have been confirmed as dengue
positive. Thirty-three patients have succumbed to the disease.
The
basic type of dengue, the non-haemorrhagic form, is not typically
fatal. It is the haemorrhagic form, which leads to various degrees
of internal bleeding, that can be fatal. But the incidence of
mortality is not high. Only five per cent of those infected
with DHF die. So while 33 deaths is tragic, it is not out of
whack with international dengue-associated casualty rates. The
majority of cases have been reported in the seaside city of
Karachi: over 1,700 suspected and over 500 positive cases.
How
do we stop the virus from becoming worse? What do we need to
do to stop dengue from reaching undisputable epidemic proportions?
Part of the answer seems to lie in water.
Water is the source of life. This is the same for mosquitoes
as it is for humans. So, it is not surprising that rates of
dengue infection peaked in August. After Karachi’s two
heavy monsoon rainfalls, the city was flooded – there
were literally thousands of stagnant pools of water splashed
across the city. Still water is the mosquito’s breeding
ground.
Because
dengue haemorrhagic fever is caused by a virus for which there
is no known cure or vaccine, the only treatment is to treat
the symptoms. This, of course, is reactionary. According to
the WHO country representative in Pakistan, Dr Khalif Bile Mohamud,
preventive measures, including improved sanitation conditions,
are the only answers to this global phenomenon. “We need
to intensify the public cleanliness campaign to stop mosquitoes
from breeding and carry out fumigation and fogging to eliminate
mosquitoes and their breeding grounds,” he said. He remarked
that unless the solid waste removal system in urban areas was
improved, there was hardly any chance of success in eliminating
the habitat of mosquitoes. “Moreover, we need to ensure
effective surveillance, monitoring and diagnosis facilities
and ensure proper netting of infected patients during their
hospitals stays and recovery period,” he said, emphasizing
the need for more effective and sustainable vector control measures
during the main dengue transmission season.
The
stress these days is on dengue-testing. Tasneem Ahsan from JPMC
explains that this test measures the specific antibody that
develops in response to infection from the dengue virus. “However,
the body requires time to make that antibody and normally you
need two tests to definitively establish its presence: one in
the beginning and the other about a fortnight later.”
The second test establishes that there has been a marked alteration
in the state of the antibody. “But by then, two weeks
later, most dengue patients are better. Or, in rare cases, dead,”
says Ahsan. “I think all this hype about free dengue tests
and kits is pretty much useless.”
She
does admit, however, that testing has its merits. When hospitals
were getting a spate of cases and didn’t know what to
diagnose, it was initially useful. Dengue symptoms, including
fever, headache, muscle aches, joint aches, decreased appetite
and nausea, are similar to symptoms in dozens of other illnesses,
such as forms of malaria, severe septicimia, or even the Congo
virus, which is the first concern of patient care-givers. “The
Congo virus spreads through contact with an infected person’s
fluid, unlike dengue, which only spreads via a mosquito bite,”
explains Ahsan. “That is the reason that, generally, there
are always deaths of medical care-givers tending to hospitalised
Congo virus patients. When these cases first started pouring
into the hospital, we didn’t know what it was, and so
there was a concern about the epidemiology of the symptoms because
they overlap in a variety of diseases. But the thrust of the
movement should be on sanitisation.”
Further,
some collected data is also casting doubt on some dengue fever
accepted facts. According to Dr Seemin Jamali, who heads the
accident and emergency department at JPMC, compiled data on
affected patients shows that 23 per cent of the 238 patients
seen at the hospital were females, while the other 77 per cent
were males. This puts a question mark on the belief that homes
are the greatest places of risk.
Some
say hope is around the corner, though. And it comes in the form
of a ‘papaya leaf miracle cure.’ But doctors have
little knowledge of the much publicised reports that have been
circulating on the Internet and in the city of Karachi. According
to one news report, Dr Sumedha Bajaj of Bombay Hospital, says
that two tablespoons of papaya leaf juice, extracted from the
fruit’s raw leaves, taken only once a day, is a quick
and easy dengue cure. However, Dr Bajaj seems to reference only
one instance where a patient rebounded – in three quick
days nonetheless – after taking the tropical fruit remedy.
And just a quick scan of the web shows that every reference
to this miracle cure is to the same patient, with almost no
other doctors stepping in to back Dr Bajaj’s claim.
Around
the world, the emphasis for dengue prevention is on a sustainable,
community-based integrated mosquito control programme, with
limited reliance on insecticides. Preventing epidemic disease
requires a coordinated community effort to increase awareness
about dengue/DHF, how to recognise it, and how to control the
mosquito that transmits it. The easiest way to eliminate potential
breeding grounds is to take care of standing water. Items that
collect rainwater, or those that are used to store water, should
be covered or properly discarded. Pet and animal watering containers
and vases with fresh flowers should be emptied and scoured regularly.
This will eliminate the mosquito eggs and larvae and reduce
the number of mosquitoes present in these areas.
Also,
doctors advise use of personal protection such as full-length
clothing (no exposed arms or legs), netting, mosquito repellent
containing DEET, and if possible, travelling during periods
of minimal mosquito activity.
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