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Dengue Fever Re-Emergence in Florida

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cachukis Donating Member (232 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-15-10 04:06 PM
Original message
Dengue Fever Re-Emergence in Florida
Source: HIV Carelink

DENGUE RE-EMERGES IN FLORIDA
A CDC/State of Florida survey of 240 healthy residents of Old
Town, Key West showed a significant percentage of persons with
recent (IgM -3%) or remote (IgG-38%) exposure to dengue virus.
Twenty-two cases of dengue were confirmed in Key West between
July and October of 2009; the first in Florida since the 1930s.

Dengue is a member of the flavivirus group. Other members of this
group include the causative agents of West Nile fever, St. Louis
encephalitis, and yellow fever. Dengue is endemic throughout the
tropics. Considered the second most important mosquitotransmitted
disease after malaria, dengue represents a major public
health threat due to its swift spread and potential for complications.
Outbreaks usually occur every 6 to 8 months in endemic areas.

The clinical presentation of dengue ranges from asymptomatic
disease diagnosed serologically to an intense febrile, flu-like illness
characterized by intense bony pain (“break bone fever”). DHF (most
common in endemic areas) begins like regular dengue but can
advance to increased vascular permeability, plasma leakage,
hemorrhage and shock. DHF typically is the result of a new
infection in individuals who have previously been infected with a
different serotype of the virus.

Read more: http://www.faetc.org/PDF/Newsletter/Newsletter-Volume11-2010/HIVCareLink-03-11-09-v11_i01-Dengue_Fever_Re-Emerges_in_Florida.pdf
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grantcart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-15-10 04:40 PM
Response to Original message
1. I have suffered from Dengue also known as "Break Bone Fever"

Excruciatingly painful it does not reoccur like Malaria.

Climate change is expanding the habital area that the Dengue mosquito lives and every year the area Denque exists in Asia increases and withing 10 years will have expanded all the way to Europe.

Pardoxically Dengue is only a problem for non resident populations because when children get it young the effects are hardly noticeable. In fact natives in Asia are not even aware of the disease and only become informed when a visitor comes down with the fever that causes 3 weeks of intense pain.
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cachukis Donating Member (232 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-15-10 04:52 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. My studies of "the plague" (14th C.) have always
worried me about sneak attacks. A recent comparison of a 14th C. English grave with a Scandinavian one found the majority of the buried suffered from caused lesions unrelated to the plague. They had immunodeficiencies unknown at the time. Let's hope we stay ahead.
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justinaforjustice Donating Member (519 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-15-10 05:49 PM
Response to Reply #1
3. Dengue Attacks Both Native and Non-native populations.
Dengue fever is a major health problem here in Venezuela and its dangers are not restricted to non-resident populations. In its most virulent form, hemorrhagic fever, it can be fatal.

I just learned from a doctor last night that dengue fever is the reason that aspirin tablets here in Venezuela are restricted here to less than 100 milligram. Aspirin "thins" the blood and reduces coagulation time, which promotes the de-coagulation and hemorrhaging which accompanies Dengue.
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grantcart Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Apr-16-10 02:21 AM
Response to Reply #3
7. In Asia it is unknown to the native population

Probably because that population has had an extra couple of thousand of years to adapt to it.

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hatrack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-15-10 06:03 PM
Response to Original message
4. Just a matter of time, anyway - dengue was here (N. America) for a good long while . . .
And as things get warmer, it'll likely be back. They used to have substantial outbreaks as far north as Philadelphia, IIRC.
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Bonobo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-15-10 06:53 PM
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5. Is the US becoming a 3rd world country?
http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2010/02/becoming-third-world-country.html

I say “finish the process,” because we are already most of the way there. What distinguishes the Third World from the privileged industrial minority of the world’s nations? Third World nations import most of their manufactured goods from abroad, while exporting mostly raw materials; that’s been true of the United States for decades now. Third World economies have inadequate domestic capital, and are dependent on loans from abroad; that’s been true of the United States for just about as long. Third World societies are economically burdened by severe problems with public health; the United States ranks dead last for life expectancy among industrial nations, and its rates of infant mortality are on a par with those in Indonesia, so that’s covered. Third World nation are very often governed by kleptocracies – well, let’s not even go there, shall we?

There are, in fact, precisely two things left that differentiate the United States from any other large, overpopulated, impoverished Third World nation. The first is that the average standard of living here, measured either in money or in terms of energy and resource consumption, stands well above Third World levels – in fact, it’s well above the levels of most industrial nations. The second is that the United States has the world’s most expensive and technologically complex military. Those two factors are closely related, and understanding their relationship is crucial in making sense of the end of the “American century” and the decline of the United States to Third World status.

The US has the world’s most expensive military because, just now, it has the world’s largest empire. Now of course it’s not polite to talk about that in precisely those terms, but let’s be frank – the US does not keep its troops garrisoned in more than a hundred countries around the world for the sake of their health, you know. That empire functions, as empires always do, as a way of tilting the economic relationships between nations in a way that pumps wealth out of the rest of the world and into the coffers of the imperial nation. It may never have occurred to you to wonder why it is that the 5% of the world’s population who live in the US get to use around a third of the world’s production of natural resources and industrial products – certainly it never seems to occur to most Americans to wonder about that – but the economics of empire are the reason.

A century ago, in 1910, it was Britain that had the global empire, the worldwide garrisons, and the torrents of wealth flowing from around the world to boost the British standard of living at the expense of everyone else’s. A century from now, in 2110, if the technology to maintain any kind of worldwide empire still exists – and it can be done with wooden sailing ships and crude cannon, remember; Spain managed that feat very effectively in its day – somebody else will be in that position. It won’t be America, because empire is the methamphetamine of nations; in the short term, the effects feel great, but in the long term they’re very often lethal. Britain managed to walk away from its empire without total catastrophe because the United States was ready, willing, and able to take over, and give Britain a place in the inner circle of US allies into the bargain; most other nations have paid for their imperial overshoot with a century or two of economic collapse, political chaos, and social disintegration.
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BreweryYardRat Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-15-10 09:13 PM
Response to Original message
6. Like this state wasn't already bad enough.
Edited on Thu Apr-15-10 09:13 PM by BreweryYardRat
The universe seems to be confirming my need to get out of here.
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