Leaking Containers: Success and Failure in Controlling the Mosquito Aedes aegypti in Brazil
- PMID: 28207332
- PMCID: PMC5343710
- DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2017.303652
Leaking Containers: Success and Failure in Controlling the Mosquito Aedes aegypti in Brazil
Abstract
In 1958, the Pan American Health Organization declared that Brazil had successfully eradicated the mosquito Aedes aegypti, responsible for the transmission of yellow fever, dengue fever, chikungunya, and Zika virus. Yet in 2016 the Brazilian minister of health described the situation of dengue fever as "catastrophic." Discussing the recent epidemic of Zika virus, which amplified the crisis produced by the persistence of dengue fever, Brazil's president declared in January 2016 that "we are in the process of losing the war against the mosquito Aedes aegypti." I discuss the reasons for the failure to contain Aedes in Brazil and the consequences of this failure. A longue durée perspective favors a view of the Zika epidemic that does not present it as a health crisis to be contained with a technical solution alone but as a pathology that has the persistence of deeply entrenched structural problems and vulnerabilities.
References
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- The expression “leaking containers” is borrowed from Lynn Morgan’s description of storage of dead fetuses. Lynn Morgan, Icons of Life: A Cultural History of Human Embryos (Berkeley, CA: California University Press, 2009).
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- “El Ministro de Salud Pública de Brasil Calificó de Catastrófica la Situación Que Vive el País,” Telemundo, January 26, 2016, http://www.teledoce.com/telemundo/internacionales/brasil-esta-perdiendo-... (accessed January 26, 2017)
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- Dilma Roussef, “Estamos Perdiendo la Lucha Contra el Mosquito Aedes aegypti,” Infobae América, January 29, 2016, http://www.infobae.com/2016/01/29/1786411-dilma-rousseff-estamos-perdien... (accessed January 26, 2017)
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- Fred Soper, “The 1964 Status of Aedes aegypti Eradication and Yellow Fever in the Americas,” American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 14, no. 6 (1964): 887–891. Pan American Sanitary Organization changed its name to PAHO (Pan American Health Organization) in 1958. - PubMed
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