Yellow fever risk in parts of Brazil, concerns over spread to urban centers and tourists

Mark Ross
By Mark Ross
March 10, 2017World News
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The entire Brazilian state of Espirito Santo is now considered at risk for yellow fever transmission, the World Health Organization says, raising concerns the deadly virus could spread to the nation’s biggest cities.

An ongoing yellow fever outbreak has so far been limited to rural areas, where it is mainly spread to humans by two rural species of mosquito that likely bit infected monkeys, according to Brazilian health officials. A sharp increase in the number of dead monkeys found in Brazil’s southeast first raised alarm the virus is spreading, especially after a few confirmed cases in monkeys occurred near Belo Horizonte and Vitoria. It is not yet clear what sparked the outbreak.

A viral disease found in tropical Africa and the Americas, yellow fever mainly affects humans and monkeys. It is often asymptomatic or mild in humans, but is deadly for monkeys.

But there are growing concerns the virus could spread to urban centers like Rio de Janeiro, Sao Paulo, Belo Horizonte and Vitoria – areas where tens of millions live and where the WHO said the virus could likely start spreading in a human-to-human cycle via the Aedes aegypti mosquito.

That mosquito, common in many tropical and subtropical cities, also carries the dengue and Zika viruses.

Brazil’s Health Ministry said Tuesday (March 7) that since December, when the yellow fever outbreak was first detected, there have been 127 confirmed deaths, with another 106 under investigation.

Out of a total 1,500 suspected cases, 371 have been confirmed, 966 are still being examined, and the rest ruled out. The number of suspected and confirmed cases is Brazil’s highest since 2000.

Vaccination against yellow fever fell in Brazil’s southeast in recent decades because the virus had in large part been eradicated from the region. Now, though, the health ministry is rushing to vaccinate people, sending nearly 15 million extra doses to the newly affected areas.

“I have already asked all the prefects to increase the number of vaccination centres so we can give as quickly as possible the 3,600,000 immunization doses which Espirito Santo state is receiving in an extraordinary manner,” Ricardo Barros, Brazil Health Minister, said.

Brazil’s health officials are investigating whether it is related to a tailings dam collapse in 2015 at an iron ore mine owned by BHP Billiton and Vale SA. The accident, Brazil’s worst ever environmental disaster, could have disrupted monkeys’ habitat and food supplies.

Barros urged residents to get vaccinated.

“We are in a more stable situation but it is necessary to widen coverage. People should go to the vaccination centre and the prefecture should increase the number of vaccination centres to avoid people standing in lines,” Barros said.

In a 2013-17 risk assessment, the WHO advised travelers get vaccinations if they were visiting all but eight Brazilian states – six in the northeast, along with Espirito Santo and Rio de Janeiro. The WHO list now includes northern Rio de Janeiro and all of Espirito Santo, according to WHO guidance updated this week.

(REUTERS)

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