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Karl Marx's Camel
25th September 2006, 20:32
Cuba intensifies campaign against dengue fever

HAVANA Cuban authorities have intensified their campaign against dengue fever, sending military planes to fumigate streets, buildings and rooftops in the capital and going door-to-door to spray against mosquitoes potentially carrying the disease.

They have remained silent, however, on the number of victims of the disease. Community watch groups are telling Cubans there is an epidemic and the number of people infected is growing.

A full-blown epidemic in Cuba in 1981 left 158 people dead.

"There has been a serious effort across the country ... to avoid the infestation of the mosquito, which is the transmitting agent of the disease," Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque told The Associated Press in New York, declining to provide more details.

Vice President Carlos Lage told public health workers that their top priority is to "decrease infection."

Cuban workers fumigate homes several times a week, as inspectors check out water tanks where the mosquitoes reproduce. Anyone who denies them access can be fined.

Dengue, a disease found in tropical and subtropical regions, causes severe joint pain, high fever, nausea and a rash. In severe cases, it causes internal bleeding and leads to death. The virus is most commonly spread by mosquitoes that have contracted it after biting infected humans.

HAVANA Cuban authorities have intensified their campaign against dengue fever, sending military planes to fumigate streets, buildings and rooftops in the capital and going door-to-door to spray against mosquitoes potentially carrying the disease.

They have remained silent, however, on the number of victims of the disease. Community watch groups are telling Cubans there is an epidemic and the number of people infected is growing.

A full-blown epidemic in Cuba in 1981 left 158 people dead.

"There has been a serious effort across the country ... to avoid the infestation of the mosquito, which is the transmitting agent of the disease," Foreign Minister Felipe Perez Roque told The Associated Press in New York, declining to provide more details.

Vice President Carlos Lage told public health workers that their top priority is to "decrease infection."

Cuban workers fumigate homes several times a week, as inspectors check out water tanks where the mosquitoes reproduce. Anyone who denies them access can be fined.

Dengue, a disease found in tropical and subtropical regions, causes severe joint pain, high fever, nausea and a rash. In severe cases, it causes internal bleeding and leads to death. The virus is most commonly spread by mosquitoes that have contracted it after biting infected humans.



http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/09/22/...engue_Fever.php (http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2006/09/22/news/CB_GEN_Cuba_Dengue_Fever.php)


Cuba wages war on tiny enemy: the mosquito that spreads dengue
http://www.todayonline.com/OthPictures/SGE.QIK36.230906163837.photo00.quicklook.default-245x167.jpg

Fidel Castro isn't the only one ailing in Cuba, where authorities are on the charge, spraying from aircraft and military trucks in a war on a great big, tiny enemy: the mosquito that spreads dengue.
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The communist government has summoned everyone from miltary troops to ordinary workers, to young people doing their military service and school kids, to pitch in in the fight against dengue, which in its hemorrhagic form can be deadly.
"We cannot speak of an epidemic ... but there are people who have dengue," a physician, 35, told AFP on condition that he not be named.
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In the hot rainy summer season "there are a lot of smaller outbreaks of diseases; prevention is health policy in Cuba, and extreme measures are taken to avoid epidemics," the doctor added.
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Though dengue is a concern across the Caribbean and most of Latin America, it is arguably more sensitive an issue in Cuba where health care is a top "achievement" of the Americas' only communist government.
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And Cuba is now in unchartered territory as Fidel Castro, 80, ceded power in July for the first time in almost 48 years to his brother, Raul Castro, 75, after intestinal surgery.
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"I was quite ill, I had been bitten by a million mosquitos, I had some bleeding, but now I am doing well, I have been recovering; they gave me vitamins and they have been here to spray," one woman, 43, a resident of Havana's El Vedado neighborhood, said privately.
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She wound up in intensive care for four days at Havana's Salvador Allende Hospital. "I had 22 intravenous treatments in the total 12 days that I was in the hospital," she explained.
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The "Offensive against the Enemy" -- the Aedes Aegypti mosquito known for its striped legs -- campaign kicked off a month ago in official media, urging Cubans to work to eliminate any standing water where the bug can breed.
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Armed with spray cans of chemicals, young people doing their military service make spritzing rounds to Cuban homes each day. Backing them up are workers at restaurants, businesses and government offices.
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High school (secondary) students, decked out in red T-shirts and waving little flashlights, make their own rounds in the dark of night on Saturdays led by teachers, hunting for any existing or potential mosquito breeding grounds.
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Vehicles that come from central and eastern Cuba to the capital in the west are stopped and sprayed.
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Tuesday, General Jose Carrillo Gomez warned that it was necessary to "make the campaign stronger" adding that "we must all join the work, which is decisive for the Revolution."
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Fidel Castro, as he recovers in an undisclosed hospital-like facility, is closely following the details of the battle, his brother Raul told the official newspaper Granma on Saturday. Raul Castro and Politburo members meanwhile met with provincial party leaders in Havana on gearing up the fight, Granma said.
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The only way to fight dengue, according to the World Health Organization, is to fight the bug that transmits it, which breeds in standing water as small as a puddle.
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Dengue's common symptoms are high fever, muscle aches, and headaches. The hemorrhagic form of the disease can be fatal if left untreated.
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Cuba, Chile and Uruguay are the only countries in Latin America that do not have endemic dengue problems. Between 1977 and 2002, however, Cuba had four epidemics and one small outbreak.
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The most recent epidemic in Cuba was between June 2001 and March 2002, with 14,524 cases recorded, 81 of them hemorrhagic, of whom three people died, all in Havana, a study found. — AFP Fidel Castro isn't the only one ailing in Cuba, where authorities are on the charge, spraying from aircraft and military trucks in a war on a great big, tiny enemy: the mosquito that spreads dengue.
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The communist government has summoned everyone from miltary troops to ordinary workers, to young people doing their military service and school kids, to pitch in in the fight against dengue, which in its hemorrhagic form can be deadly.
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Thick clouds of white fumigation chemicals have become an everyday sight in Havana and around the country, day and night. Cuban health officials have not confirmed or denied cases of dengue.

more at.
http://www.todayonline.com/articles/144457.asp

Just got word from Havana. The hospitals are apparently overflowing, and they are thinking of putting some sections of the city in quarentine.

Tekun
26th September 2006, 01:56
This is proof, that the Cuban state puts humanity b4 anything else
Dengue is notorious in Central America, South America, and the Carribean due to the weather and terrain (generally its a problem in the world South)
Indonesia, the Philippines, and El Salvador have recently gone through dengue epidemics that have ravaged and killed thousands, and most of these cases could have been amerliorated or reduced if proper measures were taken against the disease in its initial stages, such as what the Cuban authorities are doing
Therefore, this brings out alot of the character and humanity of Cuba

Karl Marx's Camel
26th September 2006, 12:25
I don't think it's so much about "humanity", as it is practicality and pretty much "common sense". Of course, it would be quite logical to stop an epidemic that is raging in the capital.

Tekun
26th September 2006, 13:19
Originally posted by [email protected] 26 2006, 09:26 AM
I don't think it's so much about "humanity", as it is practicality and pretty much "common sense". Of course, it would be quite logical to stop an epidemic that is raging in the capital.


Well if its "common sense" which drives Cuba, then much of the world is stupid or somethin, seeing how large regions of the world have for the most part ignored this important issue
I think its more of a humane position, that of Cuba

If it attacked the countryside, Cuba would take the same position
Kinda like when hurricanes hit the island, everyone including those in the remote areas of the country are evacuated
Same goes if dengue affected the countryside, action would definitely be taken

Severian
27th September 2006, 05:53
Originally posted by NWOG+Sep 26 2006, 03:26 AM--> (NWOG @ Sep 26 2006, 03:26 AM) I don't think it's so much about "humanity", as it is practicality and pretty much "common sense". [/b]
Apparently that "common sense" is unknown in capitalist countries:


[email protected] 25 2006, 11:33 AM
(from a news article)
Cuba, Chile and Uruguay are the only countries in Latin America that do not have endemic dengue problems.

(Chile and Uruguay are a lot less tropical than Cuba.)

Yeah, if dengue is endemic all the time, you're not going to get an epidemic of it.....

This is one of Cuba's positive accomplishments - suppressing dengue by making public health a high priority, and mobilizing the population as described in the news articles.

But of course you gotta turn it around and use it to badmouth the Cuban government ad by implying - without evidence - that they're suppressing news of an epidemic.

Delirium
27th September 2006, 05:56
I wonder what they are spraying with?

Severian
7th October 2006, 01:59
From the Militant (http://www.themilitant.com/2006/7039/703951.html)

Cubans mobilize to fight new dengue outbreak

BY ROSE ANA DUEÑAS
HAVANA—The local People’s Power delegate was knocking on every door in the apartment building to make sure people were up. “They’re here to fumigate: close all your windows!” she said.

The team of volunteers followed, with their “bazookas”—hand-carried, gasoline-powered foggers—to spray every home with insecticide as neighbors waited outside.

The weekly fumigation is part of a nationwide campaign that Cubans are waging, mobilized through their mass organizations and revolutionary government, to fight an outbreak of dengue fever.

The immediate goal is to decrease the infestation of the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which spreads the sometimes-deadly virus, and then to “thoroughly analyze, with a critical spirit” how to prevent further outbreaks, said Vice President Carlos Lage during an August 31 televised meeting.

Dengue causes fever, pain in joints and muscles, skin eruptions, and swollen lymphatic glands. Its hemorrhagic version can kill. Children and the elderly are at particular risk. According to the World Health Organization, dengue is a threat in more than 100 tropical and subtropical countries, where 40 percent of the world’s population resides, and in some cases it is endemic.

In 1981 thousands of Cubans were infected with the virus and 158 people died, most of them children. The government reported at the time that the disease was deliberately introduced from outside Cuba, blaming the U.S. government. Similar crises have not been reported since then, and Cuba collaborates with medical organizations around the world in researching the disease and searching for a vaccine.

The Ministry of Public Health has a year-round prevention program using full-time employees known popularly as “the mosquito people,” who inspect homes and public places for the insect, which lays its eggs in clean or dirty standing water in everything from water tanks to old tires, empty bottles, and hollow spots in trees. Others regularly involved in this “anti-vector” campaign include the Youth Army of Labor, made up of young people completing their military service, and junior high school students who make weekly rounds of their neighborhoods armed with flashlights.

This year the extremely hot summer and recent heavy rains of the hurricane season have helped create ideal conditions for the mosquito’s spread.

While there is no danger of an epidemic, “the ability to respond adequately in response to an outbreak will allow us to control it without it reaching epidemic proportions,” said Dr. José San Martín Martínez, national director of the health ministry’s Anti-Vector Monitoring and Combat Unit, the magazine Cuba Ahora reported.

The country’s Defense Council has coordinated with the legislature, known as People’s Power, as well as with the Communist Party, the unions, Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR), Union of Young Communists (UJC), Cuban Women’s Federation, and other mass organizations to mobilize people to get rid of the mosquito and to immediately detect and treat cases of the virus.

Because the insect is most often in and around homes, education and elimination of breeding grounds are key to the campaign. Posters and flyers announcing “Offensive against the invader!” and explaining the steps for hygiene have been put up everywhere, and constant public announcements run on television and the radio.

Workers have volunteered through their unions to be freed up for two-week periods or more to be part of the inspection and fogging teams. In Havana, 145 men and women from all different industries have been organized into the first Detachment of the Anti-Vector Struggle for the Plaza neighborhood, one of many such “advance forces” to be organized in the coming weeks across the city.

The neighborhood CDRs are calling on residents to participate in clean-up efforts around their homes and yards to get rid of old tires, empty bottles, or other potential breeding grounds. Youth who work as revolutionary social workers, organized by the UJC, are making daily rounds in neighborhoods where cases have been reported, to check up on the elderly and people living alone. Special medical attention is being provided, including close observation under mosquito nets, when people have been bitten and show possible symptoms. Along with the house-to-house, school, and workplace fogging, health ministry trucks are spraying the pesticide, sometimes nightly in particularly infested neighborhoods, and crop-duster planes have also been used.

Workplaces can be fined if they do not take care of water leaks or other conditions that are conducive to the mosquito’s spread. The weekly Tribuna de La Habana published a list of workplaces fined after mosquito breeding grounds were found, and where “the administrative managers have not shown the attitude required for the anti-vector battle being waged by our people.”

****

Also:

Dengue outbreaks have not only been reported this year in Cuba, but also in Brazil, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Honduras and Paraguay.
source (http://havanajournal.com/culture/entry/cuba-spraying-for-dengue-fever-mosquito/)

I doubt any of those capitalist countries have placed the same priority on combatting dengue, let alone mobilized the population to do so.

BreadBros
7th October 2006, 02:06
Thats great news that the government is going all out to fight the epidemic, you really dont see that kind of effort in other Latin American countries.

Karl Marx's Camel
14th October 2006, 14:48
The dengue seems to be under control now, some foreign newspapers (and above all the no.1 italian newspaper Corriere della Sera) tried to spread a lot of panic... not good for tourism...
They were unable to publish a single picture of fumigation etc going on, in fact their writer was basing the info on some reports received from Miami...

They are still fumigating the vehicles going OUT of Havana, not the inbound vehicules.
The situation is getting better.

Severian
15th October 2006, 10:15
Originally posted by NWOG+Oct 14 2006, 05:49 AM--> (NWOG @ Oct 14 2006, 05:49 AM) The dengue seems to be under control now, some foreign newspapers (and above all the no.1 italian newspaper Corriere della Sera) tried to spread a lot of panic... [/b]
Hm. Did anybody here buy into that, and also try to spread panic? Let's see, there was this one guy....


[email protected] 25 2006, 11:33 AM
[Thread title] Epidemic in Cuba, dengue fever
.....
Just got word from Havana. The hospitals are apparently overflowing, and they are thinking of putting some sections of the city in quarentine.
Who was that masked man?

Karl Marx's Camel
15th October 2006, 14:22
What? Just telling what's happening.

You need to calm down little boy.

UndergroundConnexion
15th October 2006, 15:19
I will be in Havanna in 7 days, and i was told that this wasnt really an issue, and the the government was on top of it, so it wouldnt be a problem.

Karl Marx's Camel
15th October 2006, 15:25
How long are you gonna stay?

I have several friends that is visiting Cuba now. According to them, basically the biggest problems are only trivial matters like good weather (the heat), and occasional delays because of military activity on the highway.

Perhaps it would be wise though to bring a repellant?

UndergroundConnexion
16th October 2006, 18:36
Imma stay for 1 week aprox

ye I have been informed on that, and it is also hurricane season i beleive, but here again the government is really on top of it , and the evactuation system in Cuba is so good that other countries are looking at it, to improve theirs.

The Cuban state is really doing a good job. Viva Fidel

Karl Marx's Camel
16th October 2006, 22:16
Yes, the Cuban govt is very good at handling emergencies. :)

bezdomni
16th October 2006, 23:11
Originally posted by [email protected] 16 2006, 07:17 PM
Yes, the Cuban govt is very good at handling emergencies. :)
Hell of a lot better than the US.

During Katrina the Cuban Government offered to send thousands of doctors and tons of medical supplies, but Bush turned down the offer and let New Orleans drown.