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Rediff.com  » News » Expert sounds the alarm on yellow fever threat to India

Expert sounds the alarm on yellow fever threat to India

Source: ANI
March 23, 2011 11:40 IST
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A regional health adviser to the World Health Organisation has warned that India and several other countries in South East Asia face an imminent threat from the dreaded yellow fever virus.

According to Dr AP Dash, who is one of the participants in a WHO-sponsored conference on yellow fever being held at Colonia Santa Maria in Goa, the threat of yellow fever hitting India is real because the mosquito that carries dengue is also a carrier of the yellow fever virus.

He warned that if the virus hits India, it could wipe out a large part of the country's population.

The three-day conference, which concludes on March 25, will see experts deliberating on the yellow fever threat. There is said to be no cure for the virus other than protective vaccination which is available only at a few urban centres in India, primarily for the convenience of Indians travelling to yellow fever prone areas.

Among those attending the conference are Dr RK Srivastava, director general, health services, and WHO experts John Woodall and Gilles Poemerol, who are working in Brazil and Singapore respectively.

Yellow fever is a viral disease, endemic to tropical regions of Africa and the Americas. It principally affects human and non-human primates and is transmitted though the mosquito Aedes Aegypti, the same mosquito that transmits the dengue virus.

India has thus far successfully kept the virus away, but the frequency of yellow fever moving from the American rain forest to urban areas is increasing.
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Source: ANI
 
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