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Chikungunya Outbreaks — The Globalization of Vectorborne Diseases
448
Citations
4
References
2007
Year
Disease OutbreakInfectious Disease ControlVector-borne PathogenVector Borne DiseasePathogen EpidemiologyClinical EpidemiologyDisease RecurrenceEmerging Infectious DiseaseChikungunya FeverPublic HealthParasitologyInfectious Disease EpidemiologyReunion Health AuthoritiesPathogen PrevalenceVirologyDisease EmergenceEpidemiologyEmerging Infectious DiseasesGlobal HealthMedicineVectorborne DiseasesIndian Ocean
Chikungunya fever, a mosquito‑borne alphavirus disease, caused a 2006 outbreak across several Indian Ocean islands, following earlier epidemics in Kenya (2004) and the Comoros. In Reunion, 34% of the 770,000 residents were clinically infected, resulting in 237 deaths (≈1 per 1,000 cases) and a 35% seroprevalence with minimal asymptomatic infections. No additional information provided.
In 2006, an outbreak of chikungunya fever — an arthralgic disease caused by a mosquito-borne alphavirus — swept over a number of islands in the Indian Ocean (the Comoros, Mauritius, the Seychelles, Madagascar, Mayotte, and Reunion). In Reunion, which has a population of 770,000, there were 265,000 clinical cases (an incidence of 34%), and the disease was implicated in 237 deaths (about 1 per 1000 clinical cases); a recent report by Reunion health authorities indicated that the seroprevalence was 35%, with very few asymptomatic cases. The epidemic had started with outbreaks in Kenya in 2004 and the Comoros early in . . .
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