Dengue, Zika and Vector Control: DR Alex Cook, Associate Professor, SSHSPH
Dengue, Zika and Vector Control: DR Alex Cook, Associate Professor, SSHSPH
Photo by Ronggy
Plasma leakage,
Fever, nausea,
severe bleeding,
vomiting, rash,
Death severe organ
aches , pains,
involvement
reduced white
(liver, CNS,
blood cells Dengue heart)
Hemorrhagic Fever
Dengue fever
Mild symptoms
Asymptomatic
If you get infected by dengue, can you get it again, like influenza?
Infectious
immune to that virus
Life cycle
of Aedes
aegypti
~2d ~4d
Male: vegetarian
Female: bites during day (dawn and dusk) to get protein for her eggs
Where the mosquitoes are
Death
Acute disability
You lose this many years of life due to short term
effects of influenza infection this year
Why is SG
an outlier?
Vector control programme
Reduced the breeding index
to very low levels
like random spot checks at houses
JeCCo
But only
~33% of
cases are
linked to
a cluster!
What about
Zika?
Index
case
Take home
points
Take homes
Most dengue cases are mild and not diagnosed, but many need to be hospitalised and
some people die
Dengue is primarily an adult disease in Singapore
Burden of dengue is lower in Singapore than our neighbours
It has been reduced a lot due to public health interventions: eliminating mosquito
breeding from most homes and reactive source reduction around domestic clusters
Control is expensive
Because herd immunity is low, it is easy to spread, and incidence has risen to the highest
on record
The mosquitoes that spread dengue also spread Chikungunya, zika, and potentially
yellow fever
yellow fever very highly dangerous
Both trials
in children
Adapted from Villar et al (2015) NEJM 372:113-123
Braddell
Nee Soon
Tampines