TotallyOz Posted November 25, 2010 Posted November 25, 2010 Sorry, I have not been around much this week. I thought I had food poisoning and have been to hospital a few times and then today, they finally gave me a diagnosis. I have Dengue Fever and it will take a bit more to recover from this. So, if there are threads that mentioned my name and you think I have you on ignore, I assure you that is not the case. I'll be back to more active as soon as I break the fever and divorce my new best friend, (the bidet). Quote
Guest StevenDraker Posted November 25, 2010 Posted November 25, 2010 Where are you globetrotting again, Oz? Beware those mosquito bites ... Wishing you a speedy recovery ! Steven ~ Quote
Members Lucky Posted November 25, 2010 Members Posted November 25, 2010 Oz, so sorry to hear that you are ill, especially with something as nasty as dengue fever. Here's wishing you a quick recovery. Don't worry about us, it's you that you need to focus on. Quote
Members KYTOP Posted November 26, 2010 Members Posted November 26, 2010 Sick in some foreign paradise no doubt, that sucks and not in a good way. Get well soon. Quote
Members Lucky Posted November 27, 2010 Members Posted November 27, 2010 An AP article posted last Wednesday by Drey at gaytravelbrazil.com: From the AP: RIO DE JANEIRO – Health officials say Brazil is at risk of an even deadlier outbreak of dengue fever as the South American nation enters its long, wet summer, when standing water turns into breeding ponds for the mosquitoes that spread the disease. The country saw a dramatic spike in the number of fatal cases this year: 592 were recorded from January through October, an increase of 90 percent over the 312 dengue deaths recorded during the same period last year, according to figures released Thursday by the Ministry of Health. And the resurgence of the Type 1 dengue strain largely absent in Brazil since the 1990s means that cases could continue to rise, officials say, stretching an overtaxed health care system. When the six-month rainy season starts in December, the frequent downpours will quickly turn trash piles, old tires, abandoned wells and even crumpled cigarette packs into containers of stagnant water where mosquitoes can breed. Luis Fernando Moraes, president of the Regional Council of Medicine of Rio de Janeiro, said the risk is particularly high for children who have never been exposed to the resurgent Type 1 strain of the disease and thus have low resistance to it. Exposure to a single strain of the disease helps develop immunity to that particular variant, but subsequent infection by a different strain can cause the sometimes fatal hemorrhagic dengue. Symptoms of dengue include flulike conditions such as high fever, headaches, and severe muscle and joint pain. The health ministry has registered about 940,000 cases of dengue so far in 2010, nearly double last year's total. Treatment options are few, and a potential vaccine is still in testing and not available to the public. A health ministry report said the states most at risk include Rio de Janeiro, where the recent closure of a major suburban hospital and the scheduled shuttering of two more has raised concerns that there might not be enough medical resources to deal with an epidemic. "There is huge concern with the arrival of summer," Moraes said. "We could face a difficult situation in which our overburdened health care system would be stretched even further." Brazil has worked hard to fight the disease within its own borders and help neighboring countries, said Dan Epstein, a spokesman with the World Health Organization in Washington, D.C. The government is campaigning to educate the public to prevent water from pooling, but getting word to the sprawling country's remote areas is tough, Epstein said. "The weather and circumstances make for perfect breeding ground for Aedes aegypti mosquitoes," he said. The WHO estimates that more than 2.5 billion people worldwide are at risk for dengue, and at least 50 million are sickened each year. "It's a serious problem in the Americas and globally, particularly in Southeast Asia," Epstein said. "It's one of the serious neglected diseases affecting tropical countries, and one of the things we have make a priority." To Brazil's north, neighboring Venezuela has also been confronting a dengue epidemic with about 100,000 diagnosed cases so far this year compared with 40,000 during the same period last year, according to recent Health Ministry figures. Quote
TotallyOz Posted November 30, 2010 Author Posted November 30, 2010 I left my humble abode last night for the first time in weeks. I am slowly building up more strength. Thanks for all the kind words of encouragement. Quote
Members msclelovr Posted November 30, 2010 Members Posted November 30, 2010 I'm sorry to hear this - it's a nasty illness to get - but I'm glad you're recovering gradually Incidentally, adding to Lucky's post above, I wrote earlier on the gaytravelbrazil website about the risk of dengue fever in Buenos Aires (as I know some travellers to Brazil go onto Argentina). There was an outbreak last Summer (February/March 2010) in Buenos Aires with tens of cases reported. Dengue fever has always been present in the north of both countries, but it is not confined there. I feel casual travellers may not be aware that it is also a risk in the major cities, and they should get medical care if they develop a sudden fever or flu-like symptoms. Quote