Bangladesh struggles to contain record dengue outbreak
Eight people have died and there have been 13,637 cases of the disease so far this year
Bangladesh is in the grip of the country’s worst-ever dengue fever outbreak, officials said on Monday, with hospitals overflowing and social media flooded with pleas for blood donors. Eight people have died and there have been 13,637 cases of the disease so far this year, with nearly 1,100 people — most of them children — diagnosed in the last 24 hours, according to official figures.
“This number is the highest since we started keeping record on dengue patients nearly two decades ago,” senior health ministry official Ayesha Akter told AFP.
Local media reported that the number of victims could be much higher and the Amader Shomoy newspaper said at least 30 people had died of dengue this year. The capital Dhaka is the worst-hit, with the city launching a fumigation drive to kill the Aedes mosquito, which is capable of spreading devastating diseases like dengue, Zika and chikungunya.
Dengue, which causes flu-like symptoms, can be deadly if it develops into a haemorrhagic fever. There is no vaccine or any specific medicine to treat dengue, according to the World Health Organisation.
An AFP correspondent visited major hospitals in Dhaka and saw patients lying on floors and in corridors as they waited for treatment.
The country’s largest hospital — Dhaka Medical College Hospital (DMCH) — has treated some 1,858 dengue patients this month, according to director general A.K.M Nasir Uddin. “We have opened a special corner for dengue patients,” he told AFP. Doctors have been working overtime to cope with the large volume of patients.
“Our facilities are overstretched and overwhelmed. We are struggling to cope,” a medical officer at Dhaka’s Mitford Hospital said.
There have been reports of blood banks struggling to meet the needs of seriously ill patients, with appeals for blood launched on social media sites such as Facebook. One mother said she was worried about her sick daughter, aged four.
“Doctors have done all they could do. All I am doing now is calling Allah for help,” Nasima Khatun told AFP.