Pandemic Dengue in Caribbean Countries and the Southern United States — Past, Present and Potential Problems
- 23 December 1971
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 285 (26) , 1460-1469
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197112232852606
Abstract
THE outbreaks of dengue in the Caribbean area in 1963–64 and 1968–691 have served as reminders of the continuing presence of dengue in the Western Hemisphere, and the threat of recurrence of epidemic dengue in the southern United States. Since the first Caribbean pandemic in 1827, epidemics have been regularly reported in this region (Table 1). Their undiminished frequency, despite an increasing knowledge of causative viruses, disease vectors and means of prevention, must be taken as prima facie evidence of insufficient knowledge for effective long-term control or inadequate application of existing knowledge (or both). This paper will review the history . . .Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- DENGUE VIRUSES FROM FEBRILE PATIENTS IN NIGERIA, 1964-68The Lancet, 1971
- Antigenic variants of arbovirusesVirology, 1965
- Isolation of Dengue Virus from a Human Being in TrinidadScience, 1956
- DENGUE FEVERSouthern Medical Journal, 1935
- RESULTS OBTAINED IN THE TRANSMISSION OF DENGUE FEVERJAMA, 1925
- Epistaxis as a symptomatic complication during recent dengue epidemic in houstin, texasThe Laryngoscope, 1898
- On Dengue or Dandy FeverBMJ, 1877
- Dengue, or Break-Bone FeverNew England Journal of Medicine, 1860
- On Scorbutus, which prevailed in the United States Army at Council Bluffs and St. PetersThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1842
- An Account of Dengue, Danga, or Dandy Fever, as It Occurred in New- OrleansNew England Journal of Medicine, 1828