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Bangladesh has seen the highest single-day increase in dengue cases, deaths and infections this year

Dengue infection is on the rise across Bangladesh. Health officials have reported that this has been the largest single-day increase in hospital admissions and deaths of all time.

The Directorate General of Health Services announced on Sunday that 12 people had died and 740 more patients were hospitalised for the mosquito-borne illness. Dengue has infected and killed nearly 42,000 people across the country so far this year.

Many children arrive in hospital wards with high fevers, rashes and dehydration. Some develop severe complications.

Children are more susceptible to shock and rapid fluid loss, making severe dengue dangerous for them, said ABM Abdullah. He urged parents to not ignore early symptoms such as a persistent fever or bleed gums.

Entomologists claim that changing weather patterns have exacerbated the outbreak. Kabirul Bashar is a professor of zoology at Jahangirnagar University. He said that the monsoon has been longer than normal, which creates standing water everywhere.

This prolonged wet period gives mosquitoes more space and time to breed. It is intensifying this outbreak.

The rapid urbanisation of Bangladesh, coupled with poor waste management and stagnant water on construction sites, has led to an increase in mosquito breeding areas.

Doctors fear that the crisis in hospitals will worsen over the next few weeks as infections and hospital strains continue to rise.

A rise in cases of chikungunya is adding to the crisis. Chikungunya, unlike dengue, rarely results in death. However, it can cause severe joint pains and weakness.

Dengue was the worst disease to hit Bangladesh in 2023. It killed 1,705 and infected over 321,000 people. Experts are concerned that such cycles of death will continue if preventive measures are not strengthened. (Reporting and editing by Christina Fincher; Ruma Paul is the reporter)

(source: Reuters)