
HAVANA (Reuters) -Cuba is fighting a wave of mosquito-borne illnesses including dengue and chikungunya virus that have swept the island in recent weeks, affecting nearly one-third of the population and sickening swaths of workers, the country's top epidimiologist said late on Wednesday.
Dengue fever has long plagued Cuba but has grown worse as an economic crisis hampers the government's ability to fumigate, clean roadside trash and patch leaky pipes. Chikungunya, once rare on the island, has also spread quickly in recent months.
"The situation is acute," said Francisco Duran, the country's chief epidimiologist. He said the government was working "intensely" as during the COVID-19 pandemic to seek medications and vaccines to help tame the virus` impacts.
On Thursday, fumigators probed alleys and crowded buildings in some parts of the capital Havana, among the hardest hit by the mosquito-borne virus, authorities said.
Havana resident Tania Menendez praised those efforts as a necessary first step to combating mosquito-borne disease, but warned more needed to be done to clean up the city's garbage-cluttered streets and broken pipes.
"All these problems contribute to the spread of these epidemics," she said.
Chikungunya causes severe headache, rashes and joint pain which can linger months after infection, causing long-term disability.
The World Health Organization in July issued an urgent call for action to prevent a repeat of an epidemic of the chikungunya virus that swept the globe two decades ago, as new outbreaks linked to the Indian Ocean region spread to Europe and the Americas.
There is no specific treatment for chikungunya, which is spread primarily by Aedes mosquito species, also a carrier of dengue and Zika.
Many Cubans, suffering from severe shortages of food, fuel and medicine, cannot purchase insect repellant and face frequent power outages that leave them little choice but to leave windows and doors open in sultry conditions, facilitating the spread of the disease.
(Reporting by Nelson Acosta, Anett Rios, Mario Fuentes and Alien Fernandez, writing by Dave Sherwood; Editing by Alistair Bell)
LATEST POSTS
- 1
The Most Paramount Crossroads in Olympic History - 2
KJ Apa stars as Jimmy Stewart in new biopic: See his transformation - 3
Air Canada CEO To Resign After Backlash—Here’s Why Communication Skills Is Now A Leadership Requirement - 4
Remote Headphones: Upgrade Your Sound Insight - 5
Dark matter obeys gravity after all — could that rule out a 5th fundamental force in the universe?
NASA set for first crewed moon return in over half a century
Why the UAE has incurred the wrath of Somalia
Kansas school officials report high student illness, dismiss early
‘Risk children’s lives for some extra manpower’: IRGC recruits 12 year olds to fill personnel gaps
5 Superstar Couples That Motivate Relationship Objectives
South America's Memorable Destinations: A Movement Guide
What do scientists hope to learn from NASA's historic Artemis 2 moon flyby?
'A perfect storm': Airlines cut flights and increase airfares as jet fuel price spikes
New findings suggest atmosphere could exist on exoplanet TOI-561b












