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Dengue fever outbreak kills 10 in Pakistan's Punjab province

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Dengue fever outbreak kills 10 in Pakistan's Punjab province

By Jamil Bhatti

ISLAMABAD, Sept. 9 (Xinhua) -- The recent wave of dengue fever that hit Pakistan's eastern province of Punjab, especially its provincial capital Lahore, killed at least 10 people and affected 2,256 others.

The provincial health authorities have been desperately struggling to overcome the epidemic over last month, but the situation was not controlled yet. The dengue fever has spread panic among the residents of Lahore as over 2,000 affected patients were from the provincial capital.

About 300 people took blood tests on Thursday and around 200 of them were dengue affected which reflected the severance of the issue.

Dengue, an acute febrile disease spread by the bite of the mosquito has been endemic in Pakistan for the last few years. It spreads most often after the rainy season in July and August when pools of standing water serve as ideal mosquito breeding spots.

According to statistics released by the National Institute of Health (NIH) on Thursday, there have been 2,256 confirmed cases of dengue in Punjab, 130 in Islamabad and neighboring city Rawalpindi. In the southern province of Sindh and northwestern province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, there have been 170 and 18 cases respectively, including one death in each province.

Health experts said that lack of in-depth study on this subject is the main reason why dengue breaks out in Pakistan every year.

An official revealed that dengue has gone out of the government 's control because the disease had not been expected to spread in 2011 and the government took no precautionary measures beforehand.


He, on condition of anonymity, told Xinhua that the authorities had thought that dengue would spread every other year, and since it hit Punjab in 2010, it had been expected to reappear in 2012.

"The awareness and prevention campaign in Lahore and Punjab started very late. The teams responsible for preventive spraying in the city used ineffective chemicals which were unable to destroy the breeding ground of mosquitoes carrying dengue," he said.

Dr Muhammad Aslam Khan, adviser in World Health Organisation ( WHO), said "these sprays cannot kill dengue. Officials will have to adopt the right method to deal with dengue, first identifying and then spraying the WHO recognized chemicals at the places where mosquitoes carrying dengue lay eggs."

Diagnostic and Research Lab Infection Control Officer Dr Tayyba Ijaz said that the current outbreak showed that the virus had grown stronger and only proper research can find ways to eradicate it.

Pakistan Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani and President Asif Ali Zardari showed their concerns about the disease and extended full support to the Punjab government in coping with the growing number of cases of dengue fever.

Acting on reports that the virus was spreading rapidly and that measures to control it had been unsuccessful, Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif has presided over series of meetings, visited many hospitals and ordered the immediate suspension of the Lahore district health officer for failing to control the epidemic.

He also set up a task force comprising a government minister, health officials and doctors to suggest measures to curb the virus.

A political party, The All Pakistan Muslim League (APML), has appealed to the Lahore High Court to summon Punjab Chief Minister to court in person and probe into why they failed to control dengue fever wave in time.

The government has also started a media campaign to advise the public not to allow water to stand in containers, to use mosquito repellents, spray homes and be particularly vigilant at dawn and twilight when the dengue-carrying mosquitoes usually bite.

The campaign said if anyone gets high fever, severe body pain, itching and red spots, bleeding from nose and teeth and severe pain in the eyes, one should quickly go to hospital for proper tests and checkup.
 
Top official among four die of dengue | Newspaper | DAWN.COM

LAHORE, Sept 12: Dengue continues to haunt citizens as on Monday it claimed the lives of four more people, including Punjab mines and minerals department secretary Attaullah Siddiqui, a UAE-returned Pakistani youth and a school teacher.

Epidemic: Dengue steadily makes its way across Pakistan – The Express Tribune

So far 4,044 cases of dengue have been reported in Punjab, out of which 3,576 cases have been reported in Lahore alone, Health Secretary Muhammad Jehanzaib Khan said on Monday. The virus has claimed the lives of eight people in Punjab, he added. However, unconfirmed reports state that the death toll in the province has reached 10.


---------- Post added at 04:38 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:35 PM ----------

Dengue drugs from India soon | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online

LAHORE - Sencing the gravity of the situation, Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif on Sunday ordered immediate import of medicines from India to fight dengue virus. Presiding over the Special Emergency Committee meeting, the chief minister asked provincial Health Secretary to immediately contact the Indian High Commissioner for importing the WHO-approved medicines from Delhi.
 
What more worrisome are the rains.. water will stand.. mosquitoes will breed..
And in a city like Karachi.. an epidemic can break out of horrendous proportions.
 
India had attacked Pakistan with biological warfare.

And brainless coments like this just make it harder to convince people that they need to take measures to eliminate the mosquitos habitat as the major way to prevent dengue.
 
9-14-2011_81725_1.gif


---------- Post added at 03:48 PM ---------- Previous post was at 03:46 PM ----------

LAHORE: Dengue continues its grip over Punjab and the provincial capital in particular where 15 people have died from the disease, Geo News reported. Three including a boy died from the virus in the city on Wednesday.

Chief Minister Punjab Shahbaz Sharif said a case would be lodged against those not providing free treatment for Dengue. Sharif has also directed the administration of private residential colonies to conduct fumigation drives.

A case pertaining to the spread of the virus is also being heard at the Lahore High Court (LHC). The court did not receive an answer from district government and health department officials and ordered that they submit their replies by September 16.

The court stated that people were dying from Dengue and high ranking officials were not concerned.

Opposition members in the Punjab Assembly also staged a walkout with a PML-N MPA claiming that the disease would be controlled within ten days.

499 new Dengue cases were reported in Lahore and 3,925 people are suffering from the virus. All educational institutions in the city have been closed for 10 days.

Eight Chinese engineers have also been infected with the Dengue virus and are receiving treatment at different hospitals of the city.

The situation is dire in Faisalabad as well where within a span of 18 hours, 35 new Dengue cases were reported. Overall 220 Dengue cases have been reported in the city
 
What more worrisome are the rains.. water will stand.. mosquitoes will breed..
And in a city like Karachi.. an epidemic can break out of horrendous proportions.

As if Karachi hasn't got enough trouble as it stands. They really are having a bad time. I pray for the Karachi population. Terrible news.
 
What a coincidence!!
I myself had come down with Dengue fever this August.May be due to one of those trekking trips..I still feel kind of weak.
 
What more worrisome are the rains.. water will stand.. mosquitoes will breed..
And in a city like Karachi.. an epidemic can break out of horrendous proportions.

You look a lil blue yourself.Drop the cookie and get yourself a shot :blink:
 
Dengue claims six more lives in Punjab | Provinces | DAWN.COM

ISLAMABAD: Dengue claimed five lives in Lahore while a patient passed away in Chichawatni on Saturday.

Aslam, 50, a resident of Iqbal Town and Mubashir, 50, a resident of Samanabad died in the Ganga Ram Hospital while Shakil, 30, of Jaranwala passed away at Lahore’s Mayo Hospital. Moreover, Rashid and Imran of Ghaziabad succumbed to the fever at Services Hospital, a private television channel reported.

In Chichawatni, 40-year-old Ghulam Murtaza fell victim to the virus.

The number of dengue cases was also increasing in other cities, including Faisalabad, Bahawalpur, Sargodha and Taxila.

In Faisalabad, the number of dengue patients has reached 1,324. Moreover, the number of dengue patients has risen to 305 in Bahawalpur, 232 in Sargodha and 90 in Taxila.


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Dengue in Punjab: Death toll rises to 267 – The Express Tribune

LAHORE: Dengue fever has claimed five more lives on Saturday, despite numerous efforts by the Punjab government to control the epidemic.

The deadly virus has now claimed 267 lives, out of which 245 are from the provincial capital. Total number of affected people has now crossed 18,000 with more than 15,000 belonging to Lahore. Punjab has seen 242 new cases reported, out of which 199 are from Lahore.

Thousands of patients have been discharged from hospitals after being treated for the virus.
 
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