Dengue, Urbanization and Globalization: The Unholy Trinity of the 21st Century
Signature Research (United States) · Duke-NUS Medical School
Abstract
Dengue is the most important arboviral disease of humans with over half of the world's population living in areas of risk. The frequency and magnitude of epidemic dengue have increased dramatically in the past 40 years as the viruses and the mosquito vectors have both expanded geographically in the tropical regions of the world. There are many factors that have contributed to this emergence of epidemic dengue, but only three have been the principal drivers: 1) urbanization, 2) globalization and 3) lack of effective mosquito control. The dengue viruses have fully adapted to a human-Aedes aegypti-human transmission cycle, in the large urban centers of the tropics, where crowded human populations live in intimate…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Urbanization
- Dengue fever
- Globalization
- Public health
- Economic growth
- Political science
- Geography
- Socioeconomics
- Sustainable cities and communities