After a huge outbreak in Dhaka, dengue has spread to different districts outside the capital. As many as 373 patients have so far been diagnosed with the viral disease outside Dhaka this year with a sharp rise in dengue cases in the past two days, according to the Directorate General of Health Services.
The number of dengue patients in the hospitals outside Dhaka stood at 47 on Thursday, while 200 others have been released earlier. The number jumped to 373 on Saturday, with a rise of 126 patients in a day.
The government’s Institute of Epidemiology Disease Control And Research or IEDCR recorded five dengue cases outside Dhaka last year, according to its Director Meerjady Sabrina Flora.
Dr Mahmudur Rahman, a former director at the IEDCR, urged the authorities to take steps to prevent the disease from spreading across the country. He also called for raising awareness among the people.
It won’t be surprising in the present circumstances if the dengue outbreak spreads outside Dhaka, because people travel from one place to another and they can carry the virus while Aedes mosquito is everywhere, he told this correspondent.
There is no alternative to raising awareness. Places around the buildings must be cleaned to prevent the spread of dengue, he added.
Dengue first struck Bangladesh in 2000, killing 93 people. Since 2003, the death rate has gradually declined with zero fatalities in some years. But last year it took a devastating turn with over 10,000 infections and 26 deaths, according to the government statistics.
This year, according to the government control room, hospitals admitted more than 10,528 dengue patients and of them, 7,849 returned home after receiving treatment.
At least 25 people have died from the mosquito-borne disease so far this year, according to a this correspondent count, though the official record has put the death toll at eight.
Experts fear the actual number of dengue patients is much higher as all of them are not recorded officially.