El Salvador says nearly 30,000 infected
with mosquito-borne chikungunya
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[September 25, 2014]
By Nelson Renteria
SAN SALVADOR (Reuters) - El Salvador has
detected nearly 30,000 cases of the painful mosquito-borne viral disease
chikungunya, and has undertaken measures to prevent the disease-carrying
mosquitoes breeding, the head of the country's emergency services said
on Wednesday.
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Since June, when the first case was reported, there have been 29,704
people infected by the virus, with 204 of them hospitalized, Jorge
Melendez told Reuters.
"Having never been in contact with this strain, the Salvadoran
population has no defense," Melendez said, adding that nobody has
died from the outbreak.
Melendez said most of the cases have been reported in the capital
city of San Salvador, where authorities have been cleaning rivers
and fumigating.
Infection with the virus, spread by two mosquito species, typically
is not fatal but can cause debilitating symptoms including fever,
headache and severe joint pain lasting weeks or months. There is no
current treatment and no licensed vaccine to prevent it.
The virus showed up for the first time in the Americas late last
year. In the United States, locally transmitted infections - as
opposed to infections in Americans traveling abroad - have been
reported for the first time this year.
(Reporting by Gabriel Stargardter; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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