
Spread of dengue fever in Bangladesh worries medics
The Peninsula
Dhaka: Bangladesh is struggling to tamp down a surge in dengue cases as climate change turns the disease into a year round crisis, leaving some paedia...
Dhaka: Bangladesh is struggling to tamp down a surge in dengue cases as climate change turns the disease into a year-round crisis, leaving some paediatric wards packed with children squeezed two to a bed.
The Aedes mosquito that spreads dengue -- identifiable by its black and white striped legs -- breeds in stagnant pools, and cases once slowed after the monsoon rains faded.
"Normally, around this time, we would expect the flow of patients to ebb," said Fazlul Haque, walking through a ward crowded with dengue patients at Dhaka's Shaheed Sohrawardi Medical College.
"For the last three weeks, the number of dengue cases has been increasing".
"We get dengue patients almost every month," said Sabina Tabassum Anika, the doctor running the children's dengue ward.













