Venezuela
crisis could spark surge in infectious diseases: study
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[February 22, 2019]
LONDON (Reuters) - A humanitarian crisis in
Venezuela is accelerating the re-emergence of malaria, Chagas disease,
dengue, Zika and other dangerous infectious diseases and threatens to
jeopardize 20 years of public health gains, experts warned on Thursday.
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In a review published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases journal,
researchers said the worsening epidemics could spread beyond
Venezuela's borders, potentially causing a regional public health
emergency.
"As well as the return of measles and other vaccine-preventable
infectious diseases, the continued upsurge in malaria could soon
become uncontrollable," said Martin Llewellyn, a doctor and senior
lecturer at Britain's Glasgow University who led the review with
researchers from Venezuela, Colombia, Brazil and Ecuador.
He said that with its health care system collapsing and a dramatic
drop in public health programs and disease surveillance,
vector-borne diseases - those transmitted by insects such as
mosquitoes and ticks - are on the rise and have spread into new
territories across Venezuela.
The country was declared by the World Health Organization to have
eradicated malaria in 1961.
Llewellyn's team analyzed published and unpublished data and found
that between 2010 and 2015, Venezuela saw an estimated 359 percent
rise in malaria cases. This was followed by a 71 percent rise
between 2016 and 2017 because of a decline in mosquito-control
activities and shortages in medication.
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The review also found the crisis is having dramatic effects on other
vector-borne diseases in Venezuela. Active transmission of Chagas
disease, for example, is the highest seen in 20 years, and incidence
of dengue fever has risen more than five-fold.
Outbreaks of two other mosquito-borne diseases - chikungunya and
Zika - also appear to be increasing, the researchers found.
The researchers said their findings should also be seen in the
context of mass emigration. With an average of 5,500 people leaving
Venezuela every day in 2018, they said, neighboring countries face
the risk of potential imports of infectious disease outbreaks.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, Editing by William Maclean)
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