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Reference ID
U277180
Description
Hannah Gladstone interviews Luca Facchinelli.“Eliminating dengue would require huge efforts of vector control on the one hand - and virus control with vaccines on the other. At the moment, I can’t see that happening,” says Facchinelli, vector biologist at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.Verano Monumental Cemetery in Rome, Italy, is an ideal breeding ground for Aedes albopictus – the Tiger mosquito – due to the hundreds of thousands of flower pots with stagnant water, scattered across the cemetery. The Tiger mosquito can transmit dengue virus to humans.Dengue is a viral infection caused by the dengue virus, transmitted to humans through the bite of infected mosquitoes. About half of the world's population is now at risk of dengue with an estimated 100–400 million infections occurring every year. Dengue is found in tropical and subtropical climates worldwide, but has in recent decades been spreading into temperate zones. Rising temperatures across the WHO European Region, combined with rain and increased humidity, have caused an increase in cases where conditions have become more favourable for dengue’s mosquito vectors, Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. This is compounded by recent outbreaks in Latin America and Southeast Asia which have increased the likelihood of imported cases in the Region.
Asset date
07/26/2024
Country, area, WHO office
Italy
City
Rome
State/Province
Lazio
WHO Region
EURO
Copyright
© WHO / Hedinn Halldorsson
Consent
Yes
File size
14.63 MB
Visibility class:
Public
Administered By
EURO Communications
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