CDC Warns Of Rising Cases Of Dengue In The U.S. Amid Global Surge
HuffPost
Cases of the mosquito-transmitted disease are expected to increase as global temperatures do.
Federal health officials are warning that cases of dengue are rising higher than expected this year in the U.S. amid a record number of global cases of the mosquito-borne disease.
As of Monday, there have been more than 9.7 million dengue cases reported in the Americas, which is twice as many reported in all of 2023, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in a health advisory issued Tuesday.
In the U.S., there have been 2,241 confirmed cases so far, compared to 3,036 during all of 2023. This year’s total includes 1,498 cases in Puerto Rico, which declared a public health emergency in March, a month that’s historically a low-dengue season.
The vast majority of dengue cases in the continental U.S. will occur in travelers who were infected by a mosquito while visiting areas with a risk of dengue. These areas are typically in tropical and subtropical regions, where dengue transmission peaks during the warmer and wetter months, the CDC said.
“Dengue cases are likely to increase as global temperatures increase,” the CDC said. “Higher temperatures can expand the range of the mosquitoes that spread dengue, as well as affect other factors that facilitate virus transmission like faster viral amplification in the mosquito, increased vector survival, and changes in reproduction and biting rates.”