Author:
Togami Eri,Chiew May,Lowbridge Christopher,Biaukula Viema,Bell Leila,Yajima Aya,Eshofonie Anthony,Saulo Dina,Do Hien Thi Hong,Otsu Satoko,Cong Dai Tran,Ngon Mya Sapal,Lee Chin-Kei,Tsuyuoka Reiko,Tuseo Luciano,Khalakdina Asheena,Kab Vannda,Abeyasinghe Rabindra Romauld,Yadav Rajendra Prasad,Esguerra Princess,Casey Sean,Soo Chun Paul,Fukusumi Munehisa,Matsui Tamano,Olowokure Babatunde
Abstract
The global burden of dengue, an emerging and re-emerging mosquito-borne disease, increased during the 20-year period ending in 2019, with approximately 70% of cases estimated to have been in Asia. This report describes the epidemiology of dengue in the World Health Organization’s Western Pacific Region during 2013–2019 using regional surveillance data reported from indicator-based surveillance systems from countries and areas in the Region, supplemented by publicly available dengue outbreak situation reports. The total reported annual number of dengue cases in the Region increased from 430 023 in 2013 to 1 050 285 in 2019, surpassing 1 million cases for the first time in 2019. The reported case-fatality ratio ranged from 0.19% (724/376 972 in 2014 and 2030/1 050 285 in 2019) to 0.30% (1380/458 843 in 2016). The introduction or reintroduction of serotypes to specific areas caused several outbreaks and rare occurrences of local transmission in places where dengue was not previously reported. This report reinforces the increased importance of dengue surveillance systems in monitoring dengue across the Region.
Publisher
World Health Organization, Western Pacific Regional Office
Cited by
6 articles.
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