Brazil and Peru advance high-tech tools against climate-driven dengue

Scientists in Brazil and Peru are using machine learning for early outbreak predictions and Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes to curb dengue fever, amid rising cases fueled by climate change. In Lima, a 2024 epidemic overwhelmed hospitals, prompting adaptations now informing regional strategies. These efforts offer models as subtropical U.S. areas report local transmissions.

In early 2024, Santa Rosa hospital in Lima, Peru, faced an unprecedented dengue wave, treating 40 to 60 patients daily at its peak, up from just 13 the prior year. Epidemiologist Solomon Durand, drawing from Amazon experience, set up triage tents and segregated wards, limiting deaths to four among nearly 2,000 cases. 'That caught our attention,' Durand said of local cases in affluent districts, linking the surge to El Niño rains and record heat—Peru's warmest year in six decades. Hotter conditions accelerate Aedes aegypti mosquito development and dengue virus replication, with a University of Washington study attributing 18 percent of 1995-2014 cases in high-risk nations to human-caused warming. Projections warn of 50 percent more cases by midcentury without emission cuts. Globally, dengue hit 14 million cases and 9,000 deaths in 2024, mostly in the Americas. In southern Brazil, entomologist Luciano Andrade Moreira leads Wolbito do Brasil, producing 100 million Wolbachia-infected eggs weekly in Curitiba. The bacteria blocks dengue in mosquitoes, slashing cases nearly 90 percent in Niterói post-releases. Seventeen Brazilian cities declared emergencies in 2024 as hospitals overflowed. In Peru's Amazon, Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar's InnovaLab deploys sensors, drones, and AI via the Harmonize project to forecast outbreaks three months ahead, aiding resource shifts. 'The mosquito is extremely well-designed—very intelligent, very adaptable,' Carrasco-Escobar noted. In the U.S., California's first local dengue cases emerged in 2023, prompting sterile mosquito releases, but experts like Durand see parallels to Lima: 'That’s how we started. With local cases.' A stalled SMASH Act seeks $100 million yearly for surveillance.

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Illustration showing simulated rapid spread of H1N1 and COVID-19 via U.S. air travel across metro areas, highlighting key study findings.
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Simulations show H1N1 and COVID-19 spread through U.S. metro areas within weeks, with air travel a key driver

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Researchers at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health used computer simulations to reconstruct how the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic and the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic expanded across U.S. metropolitan areas. The study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that both viruses were already circulating widely in many cities within weeks, with air travel playing a larger role than daily commuting. The authors said broader wastewater surveillance, paired with infection-control measures, could help slow early spread in future outbreaks.

Kuba weist eine günstige epidemiologische Situation in der Bekämpfung von Arboviren auf, nach einem Rückgang der gemeldeten Fieberfälle um 21 Prozent in der vergangenen Woche. Diese Verbesserung unterstreicht die effektiven Bemühungen zur Kontrolle von Vektorkrankheiten wie Dengue und Zika. Gesundheitsbehörden betonen die Notwendigkeit anhaltender Wachsamkeit.

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In Brazil's shrinking Atlantic Forest, deforestation is causing mosquitoes to increasingly feed on humans, heightening the risk of diseases like dengue and Zika. A new study reveals that out of identified blood meals, most came from people rather than wildlife. This adaptation underscores how habitat loss alters disease transmission patterns.

Two major crop pests, the cotton bollworm and corn earworm, have interbred in Brazil, creating hybrids resistant to multiple pesticides. This development poses risks to soya production and food security worldwide. Experts warn of potential yield losses and environmental impacts if the pests spread unchecked.

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The Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery in Cuba has begun a specialized clinic to care for patients with post-chikungunya ailments, particularly those linked to neuropathic pain, joint pain, and paresthesia. This step provides focused treatment for individuals impacted by the mosquito-borne virus.

Eine Barigüí-Invasion, bekannt als 'Schwarze Fliege', betrifft das Salado-Becken in Buenos Aires und weckt Bedenken wegen schmerzhafter Bisse. Diese Fliegen widerstehen gängigen Repellentien und vermehren sich in Flüssen und Bächen, verschlimmert durch jüngste Regen und hohe Temperaturen. Behörden warnen vor potenziell schweren Hautreaktionen.

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Das chilenische Gesundheitsministerium hat über das Instituto de Salud Pública den Nachweis der ersten Fälle von Influenza A (H3N2) Subklade K, bekannt als „Supergrippe“, in analysierten Proben im Land bestätigt. Dieser Befund war aufgrund des globalen Verhaltens des Virus zu erwarten, das bereits in Brasilien und Peru nachgewiesen wurde. Gesundheitsministerin Ximena Aguilera klärte, dass es sich nicht um einen neuen Virus oder eine Pandemie handelt.

 

 

 

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