Dengue fever epidemic hits Rio de Janeiro

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Dengue Fever Epidemic Hits Rio De Janeiro Flna1C9460559 - Health and Medicine | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

An outburst of dengue has killed at least 47 people — and perhaps twice that — in Rio de Janeiro state this year, officials said Thursday, announcing a hot spot in a hemispheric outbreak that sickened nearly 1 million people in 2007.

State officials said 51 cases are being reported every hour as the outbreak strains public hospitals’ capacity.

“What we see today in Rio de Janeiro is a catastrophe,” said Edmilson Migovski, a professor of infectious diseases at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. “The death toll is rising because the virus is becoming more virulent, and at the same time people who were infected once are getting infected again.”

Brazil had more than half of the 900,782 cases of dengue in the Americas last year, according to the Pan American Health Organization. Of the hemisphere’s 317 deaths, 158 came in Brazil, including 31 in Rio state.

But while federal officials say overall numbers were down in early 2008, they have jumped in Rio state. State officials say dengue has already killed 47 people, and is suspected of killing another 49 whose deaths are under investigation. The state, which has 16 million inhabitants, has seen more than 32,000 dengue cases this year, officials said.

“I am treating it as an epidemic because the number of cases is extremely high,” state Health Secretary Sergio Cortes said.

Migovski told The Associated Press that the problem may actually be worse: “An emergency room doctor who has to attend 40 or 50 patients in a morning is not going to be able to inform officials about all the cases.”

Health officials across the Americas are trying to coordinate their fight against dengue, which has steadily gained strength since the early 1980s. Known as “bonebreak fever,” dengue is spread by the Aegis aegypti mosquito and can incapacitate patients for over a week with severe headaches and joint pains.

A deadly hemorrhagic variant that causes internal and external bleeding accounts for fewer than 5 percent of cases but has shown signs of growing — often affecting people who have recovered from a less-severe form.

Experts fear the virus could grow deadlier and more widespread, in part because tourism and migration are circulating four different strains across the Americas.

Federal Health Minister Jose Gomes Temporao said Rio may be seeing more dengue cases because state and city officials have failed to heed warnings on a growing problem. Rio de Janeiro Doctor’s Union this week urged prosecutors to charge city officials with criminal negligence.

Officials fight dengue by spraying insecticides and eliminating puddles of standing water where mosquitoes can breed — in the crevices of old buildings, on rooftops, inside used tires, in vacant lots and at garbage dumps.

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