.....
Dengue fever will become endemic in parts of the US, Europe, and Africa over the next decade due to climate change and urbanization, World Health Organization Chief Scientist Jeremy Farrar told Reuters on Friday.
Farrar claimed that the disease would “take off” in these regions over the coming decade as the mosquitoes that spread it migrate to previously inhospitable areas of the southern US, Europe, and sub-Saharan Africa.
“We need to talk much more proactively about dengue,” he told Reuters. “We need to really prepare countries for how they will deal with the additional pressure that will come… in the future in many, many big cities.”
Dengue fever has long been endemic to much of Southeast Asia and Latin America. It typically causes 20,000 deaths annually, and Reuters noted that cases have risen eightfold since 2000, as climate change expands the habitat of dengue-carrying mosquitoes and growing cities provide the insects with ample opportunities to feed.
Bangladesh is currently experiencing its worst-ever outbreak of dengue, with more than 208,000 cases and 1,000 deaths recorded since January, according to the Bengali Directorate General of Health Service.
Europe saw more locally acquired dengue cases last year than the entire decade beforehand, while isolated cases were recorded in Florida and Texas.
Dengue is spread by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, a different breed from the Anopheles mosquitoes that carry malaria. Aedes aegypti mosquitoes bite during the day and night and can be found indoors and outdoors.
Those who contract dengue experience fever, muscle spasms, nausea, and – in extreme cases – joint pain so severe that the disease is nicknamed ‘bone-break fever.’ Most patients recover in less than two weeks, and fewer than 1% of cases are fatal. Two vaccines are available: The more widely approved Dengvaxia, which requires previous exposure to the disease, and Qdenga, approved last year in the UK, EU, and a handful of South American and Asian countries.
The WHO worries that a surge in dengue cases could overwhelm hospitals in poorer countries. “The clinical care is really intensive. It requires a high ratio of nurses to patients,” Farrar said, “I really worry when this becomes a big issue in sub-Saharan Africa.”
Global temperatures have trended upwards steadily since the 1970s, with the Earth’s surface currently 0.86 ° Celsius warmer than the 20th Century average, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The ten warmest years on historical record have all occurred since 2010.
.....
https://www.rt.com/news/584179-dengue-fever-europe-us/
.....
B.S.! WHO hero Billy Gates is most likely releasing genetically-modified skeeters with dengue and other diseases to cull the population. Global warming is just the cover story.
Ivermectin cures Dengue, and most of the other diseases they're trying to scare us with. (They are so freaking predictable. It's gotten boring.)
True, then his miracle spray will kill them and us. He wins on both ends.
So very true. Never convinced Billy Gates is brilliant, especially when watching and listening to his interviews. Gates is another Globalist front man like Zuckerberg and the once young "genius" Google founders who are merely the public face to do the bidding of their Puppet Masters.
Release of Bill Gates genetically engineered mosquitoes in the Everglades, Florida and Texas?
Exactly!!
I'm sure it has nothing to do with Bill gates genetically modifying mosquitos, or the videos of helicopters releasing millions of mosquitos over the Texas sky
The NIH knows that Siberia had one of the biggest malaria outbreaks, ever, but it is much more scary to say it is due to Global Warming.
Cut the malarkey. Bill Gates can just let out millions of dengue-carrying mosquitos anywhere he wants at any time he wants. It has already happened with the malaria mosquitos in the South. He can kill us all with impunity. Wait for the Ebola carriers, or Disease X carriers. Gates should be incarcerated and stripped of all power.
And if not, they'll give the little skeeters a lift.
Time to bring back DDT. It never should have been banned, and the disease vectors of mosquitoes and ticks would be under control, but don't kill off and make millions more sick by eliminating the disease vectors.