Awọn alaisan Dengue ti n pọ si ni Madeira

In Portuguese Madeira, the number of cases of mosquito-borne dengue is increasing. Until Friday, this acute infectious disease was diagnosed in 14 people. A spokesman for the local government said more than a dozen people with symptoms of the infection are under medical surveillance.

On Thursday, information about the appearance of this potentially deadly disease on the island led to the depletion of repellants in local pharmacies in just a dozen hours. According to the authorities of the Madeira Pharmacy Association (ANFM), the increase in purchases of mosquito repellants was directly related to confirmed cases of dengue fever.

Since Thursday evening, the authorities of the autonomous government of Madeira have been carrying out a campaign of informing about the dangers of dengue fever and about prevention. Special messages about the disease were also sent to diplomatic missions and travel agencies on Friday.

Portuguese biologists believe that although the population of mosquitoes transmitting the dengue virus has increased significantly in Madeira in recent days, there is no concern for the time being of an outbreak on the island or the spread of the virus to continental Europe.

“We have already managed to locate the main outbreaks of this disease. Dengue-spreading mosquitoes live on the outskirts of the island. We are constantly controlling the area where these insects have appeared, ”reported Paulo Almeida from the Portuguese Institute of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Iba dengue jẹ arun ti o gbogun ti, nitori aini awọn oogun ti o munadoko, o le ja si iku. Arun naa wa pẹlu iba ti o ga, iṣọn-ẹjẹ, orififo nla, irora ninu awọn isẹpo ati awọn oju, bakanna bi sisu. Kokoro naa, ti a rii ni pataki ni awọn orilẹ-ede otutu, ni a tan kaakiri nipasẹ ẹfọn Aedes Aegypti.

Lati Lisbon, Marcin Zatyka (PAP)

sat/ mmp/ mc/

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