In the wake of Bangladesh’s deadliest dengue outbreak, researchers respond

Mongabay
Aug 02, 2024

In the wake of Bangladesh’s deadliest dengue outbreak, researchers respond


In Bangladesh, regular cycles of heat and rain have long cultivated dense populations of insects, and, by extension, the diseases they carry. Dengue fever was first confirmed in Bangladesh 60 years ago, but the disease, carried by Aedes aegypti mosquitoes, caused unforeseen devastation in 2023. By the end of the year, the death toll reached more than 1,700, making it the worst outbreak of dengue fever in Bangladesh’s recorded history.

One scientific study linked the unprecedented rash of disease to climatic changes that fostered especially ideal breeding conditions for mosquitoes and warned that future epidemics would likely arise as Bangladesh experiences changes to seasonal rain patterns and temperature spikes. Failures of common prevention techniques, due to gained genetic resistance and changes in the disease itself, intensify the threat of future dengue fever outbreaks, as well as other mosquito-borne diseases like chikungunya and malaria.

Afsana Al Latif, a graduate student and research assistant at the Insect Rearing and Experimental Station (IRES) at Jahangirnagar University, is one of the many people looking for ways to better control mosquito populations.