Brazil's health ministry has ordered
11.5 million doses of yellow fever vaccine amid the largest outbreak of
the disease in the country since 2000.
Seventy cases - including
40 deaths - are confirmed, mostly in rural areas of the state of Minas
Gerais. More than 300 cases are under investigation.
Vaccinations are being recommended for people travelling to Minas and other areas with confirmed cases.
Yellow fever is a potentially fatal disease transmitted by mosquitoes.
Most of Brazil is considered at risk from yellow fever but the country has only seen a handful of cases in recent years.
- Caused by a virus that is transmitted to humans by mosquitoes
- Difficult to diagnose and often confused with other diseases or fevers
- Most people recover after the first phase of infection that usually involves fever, muscle and back pain, headache, shivers, loss of appetite, and nausea or vomiting
- About 15% of people face a second, more serious phase involving high fever, jaundice, bleeding and deteriorating kidney function
- Half of those who enter the "toxic" phase usually die within 10 to 14 days
The governor of Minas Gerais has declared a 180-day state of emergency.
There
have also been three confirmed cases in Sao Paulo, Brazil's most
populous state, and one each in Espiritu Santo and Bahia, which both
neighbour Minas.
Around 5.5m vaccine doses have already been sent
to five states that have confirmed cases or are at risk. The other 6
million ordered will arrive soon.
It is not clear what has caused the rise in cases.
Jimmy
Whitworth, professor of international public health at the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: "It's unusual.
"The more cases you have, the more chance that it's going to light up and take off in urban areas."
The Brazilian authorities are taking the situation very seriously and appear to have enough vaccine stocks, he added.
Source: WHO
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