正文
Telephone Hotline in Pakistan Predicts Dengue Outbreaks(翻译)
A telephone helpline is aiding public health officials in Pakistan to predict dengue fever outbreaks.
Dengue is a disease carried by mosquitoes. It affects people who live in hot and humid climates of the world, according to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota.
Dengue causes sudden high fever, headaches and severe joint and muscle pain. There is no cure or vaccine for dengue fever.
An estimated 400,000 people are infected with dengue each year. Worldwide, an estimated 2.5 billion people are at risk of getting the disease.
Pakistan is making some progress in controlling dengue.
Researchers have created a computer process that uses helpline reports from the public.
The information is used to help forecast the number of cases. Public health officials then can take measures to limit the effects of dengue on a community. For example, public health workers can get rid of high populations of mosquitoes.
Lakshmi Subramanian is a teacher of mathematical sciences at New York University. He said the computer process is accurate.
He said, “The computer is actually giving you the exact range. And that is more powerful than, 'Oh, I think an outbreak is going to happen or an outbreak is not going to happen.'”
He added that an outbreak can be traced to neighborhoods and blocks where they started.
The helpline has been in operation for about five years.
The Pakistani province of Punjab was hit by a severe outbreak of dengue in 2011. More than 21,000 people were infected and 350 people died.
Hospitals in Punjab were uNPRepared and crowded with patients.
Since then, researchers in the United States and Pakistan developed the helpline. Almost 300,000 people have called the service with questions about the symptoms of dengue. They also report areas where mosquitoes are living.
Experts say the system is not costly. They say that in 2013 the number of dengue cases in the city of Lahore fell to 1,600 using information from the helpline and disease prevention efforts.
I’m Anna Matteo.
Jessica Berman wrote this story for VOANews.com. Jim Dresbach adapted it for Learning English. Mario Ritter was the editor.
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