Puerto Rico declares health emergency over dengue
Puerto Rico declared a public health emergency over dengue, a mosquito-borne illness that has surged throughout the Americas this year.
Puerto Rico declared a public health emergency over dengue, a mosquito-borne illness that has surged throughout the Americas this year.
Health officials in Puerto Rico have identified 549 cases of dengue across the US territory of 3.2 million people, with almost half the cases concentrated in the capital of San Juan. Also known as “breakbone fever,” dengue can cause headaches, soreness, fever and rashes — and, in extreme cases, death.
“This year, cases of dengue have surpassed historical records,” Health Secretary Carlos Mellado said in a statement.
The emergency declaration has no immediate impact on travel to or from Puerto Rico, a popular holiday destination, but it will make it easier for the health department to access funding for detection and prevention, Mellado said.
There have been major outbreaks of dengue this year across large swathes of the Americas, including Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil and Peru. Last year, parts of Florida were put under a mosquito-borne illness alert due to dengue.
Argentina's National Health Minister Mario Russo his counterparts from Argentina's 24 jurisdictions on Monday to analyse the spread of the virus across national terrain.
Record numbers are being reached in the country this season, with 151,310 affected and 106 confirmed deaths – surpassing the entirety of last year's total cases.
– TIMES/BLOOMBERG
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