Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Suspected dengue fever case found in Miami-Dade

Suspected dengue fever case found in Miami-Dade



Related Content

    * Study: 5 percent of Key West residents exposed to dengue fever
    * Slow South Florida mosquito season could pick up
    * Read more health news

BY FRED TASKER AND CAMMY CLARK
***@****

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/2010/07/15/1731660/suspected-dengue-fever-case-found.html#ixzz0tmXavxAl
4 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
306455 tn?1288862071
Because of the economy and budget cuts, mosquito control has been cut back, all over Florida, I'm sure. The mosquitoes should be really plentiful by Sept. after all the summer rains. Yuk!
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Yes, that makes since and I did hear we have an invasion of bedbugs across the country as well. Just makes you want to go EW!  I dont go out after dark because the mosquitos are sooo bad here. I think I would rather face the mosquito than bed bugs tho!
Helpful - 0
585414 tn?1288941302
It probably occurred for the same reasons that the west Nile virus did which is that the mosquitoes traveled by airplane, that (for whatever reasons I know this is a separate issue) there has been a rise in the temperature and also because since the use of DDT has been made illegal there has been a reemergence in various insects that did not occur before (this has happened with more benign insects such as bedbugs). What is needed is better preventative control and since insect borne diseases had not been a problem in the United States for perhaps half a decade and research into any disease that otherwise specifically occurred in third world countries wasn't very profitable, a concentrated effort as regards research into preventative and treatment means was underfunded to say the least and to prevent this from occurring again it would be a worthwhile investment. Specific research has strongly reduced cases of malaria in Africa and the same research should be used here because all of this should remain a thing of the past.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
Oh-boy...we are on our way progressing into third world living conditions.  Isn't this grand for those without health insurance and unemployed?  Talk about curses.  Maybe the politicians will expect them to crawl away into the forest and get eaten by a croc....solve the dead bodies stinking problem.

Helpful - 0
You must join this user group in order to participate in this discussion.

You are reading content posted in the Current Events . . . Group

Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
A list of national and international resources and hotlines to help connect you to needed health and medical services.
Herpes sores blister, then burst, scab and heal.
Herpes spreads by oral, vaginal and anal sex.
STIs are the most common cause of genital sores.
Condoms are the most effective way to prevent HIV and STDs.
PrEP is used by people with high risk to prevent HIV infection.