Disease: | Dengue fever |
Virus Strain: | Dengue virus |
Location: | Singapore |
Date: | 2013 |
Confirmed Cases: | 22,170 |
Deaths: | 8 |
Fatality Rate: | 0.036% |
Website: | NEA Dengue Cases |
In the 2013 dengue outbreak in Singapore, a significant rise in the number of dengue fever cases was reported in Singapore. The outbreak began in January, with the number of infections beginning to surge in April, before eventually reaching a peak of 842 dengue cases in the week of 16–22 June 2013.[1] This figure was far beyond the highest number of cases per week in the previous three years.[2] Although there were concerns that the rate of infection could exceed 1,000 per week,[3] these fears did not materialize.
As official data showed, more than 13,000 people were infected with dengue as of mid-July in 2013, fast nearing the total of 14,209 infections in the 2005 dengue outbreak, the worst year on record.[4] The 2005 record was surpassed in the week of 4–10 August, when the total number of cases of reached 14,217. The year ended with a total of 22,170 people infected with the disease, a record that would stand until 2020.[5]
Status (as of 31 December 2013) | ||
Number of cases | 22,170 | |
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Number of deaths | 8[6] |
The National Environment Agency (NEA) attributed the spike to an increase in the DENV-1 serotype of the dengue virus. Because that strain was less common, the local community was more susceptible to it.[8]
The victim was diagnosed as having viral fever on 23 May at Tan Tock Seng Hospital's Emergency Department. He was then discharged with the advice to return if his condition worsened. He subsequently returned to Tan Tock Seng Hospital on 26 May and was diagnosed with dengue fever. He then died from dengue shock syndrome on 29 May.[9]
The third victim was admitted to Khoo Teck Puat Hospital emergency department (ED) on 22 June 2013 with fever and low blood pressure. He was then sent to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) diagnosed with a dengue shock syndrome, kidney failure and liver inflammation. His condition deteriorated and died on 25 June 2013.[14]
An Indonesian male was also pronounced dead on 25 June 2013 and has become the fourth person to die from dengue in Singapore. The victim contracted dengue fever overseas between 10 and 21 June 2013 and was subsequently sent to Tan Tock Seng Hospital's Emergency Department on 23 June 2013 after a prolonged 3-day fever. His condition started to deteriorate on 24 June 2013 in the Intensive Care unit (ICU).[15]
The patient was a 66-year-old Chinese male who had multi-organ failure from severe dengue shock syndrome. He had initially gone to the Emergency Department on 2 July with fever and lethargy, and subsequent tests confirmed dengue fever. He was admitted and transferred to the ICU after deterioration, but continued to deteriorate and died on the morning of 8 July.[16]
He was first seen at Jurong Polyclinic on 29 June 2013 with a two-day history of fever. He returned to the polyclinic a few days later as he was still having fever and was referred by the polyclinic to the National University Hospital (NUH) emergency department. He was admitted to NUH's Medical Intensive Care Unit on the same day and was diagnosed with Dengue Shock Syndrome. The patient's condition improved transiently after dialysis and supportive therapy but he remained critically ill with low blood counts. The patient's condition deteriorated after he developed pneumonia with septic shock on 11 August 2013 and he died on 13 August 2013.[18]
The patient, who lived at Yishun Ring Road, had gone to the Khoo Teck Puat Hospital's Emergency Department on 28 September 2013 with a history of fever, chest pain, lethargy, nausea and loss of appetite and had intermittent fever for three weeks. She was diagnosed with dengue fever and admitted but her condition deteriorated after admission and she was transferred to the Intensive Care Unit on the same day. Despite these measures, the patient died on 30 September 2013 at 5:05am.[19]
In a joint statement, the Ministry of Health and the NEA said the dengue patient lived at Hougang Street 22. The woman, who was first seen at Tan Tock Hospital's Emergency Department on 11 November, had a history of fever. She was diagnosed with dengue and admitted. Her condition deteriorated and she died on 16 November.[20]
Dengue fever deaths in Singapore
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In March, multiple warning signs surfaced of the impending outbreak. The less common DENV-1 serotype of the dengue virus supplanted DENV-2 as the dominant strain of the virus in circulation, jumping from around 20–30% to over half of new infections. This switch threatened to drive a strong surge in infections during the upcoming mid-year dengue peak season. Epidemiological modelling provided corroboration, forecasting a peak of up to 800 cases per week in June. Based on this, warnings about the epidemic risk were issued through the government's Inter-Agency Dengue Task Force. NEA stepped up vector control measures, and a community awareness campaign was initiated. The amount of government budget allocated to combat dengue would eventually be increased by more than 20% compared to recent years.[22]
In April, the NEA began using a new community alert system. Colour-coded banners would be put up in dengue-hit areas, using the three traffic light colours green, yellow and red to indicate the number of cases in the neighbourhood.[23]
As part of NEA's vector control measures, routine inspections were conducted to check for potential mosquito breeding sites in homes, public areas of housing estates, and construction sites. On 14 June 2013, the head of NEA announced that more officers would be recruited to conduct these checks. NEA also indicated that it would resort to hiring a locksmith to forcibly gain access to conduct inspections if homeowners fail to cooperate; this happened to ten homes after the residents did not respond to notices sent to them.[3] The People's Association (PA) announced that they would recruit 10,000 volunteer "dengue fighters" to assist NEA officers during house visits.[24]
Penalties were levied as a consequence of these inspections, even government organizations were not exempt. On 5 June 2013, Sembawang-Nee Soon Town Council was fined S$200 for allowing mosquitoes to breed in water tanks the council controlled. Officers from the NEA found mosquito larvae in water tanks at the rooftops of Blocks 896C and 899A in Woodlands.[25] The Singapore Land Authority incurred S$2000 in fines for ten breeding spots discovered in vacant buildings and plots of land under its management from January to June 2013.[26]
NEA also announced that insect repellent would be distributed to every household in the country in July and August, to "help residents protect themselves from mosquito bites and thus break the chain of transmission."[27]