Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 24th June 2026, 12:35 PM
The threat of dengue fever is escalating across Bangladesh as the country enters the high-risk monsoon season. Over the last 24 hours, the mosquito-borne virus claimed two more lives, bringing the national death toll for the current year to 12. Public health officials are growing increasingly concerned about the premature spike in fatalities before the traditional peak of the outbreak.
According to a regular press briefing issued on Wednesday (24 June) by the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS), both of the recently deceased patients were residents of the Mymensingh division. Crucially, law enforcement and health authorities noted that both individuals resided outside the main city corporation area. This geographic detail underscores a worrying trend: the Aedes mosquito, which transmits the virus, is finding fertile breeding grounds well beyond major urban centres and deep into rural and semi-urban communities.
Hospitals are witnessing a steady influx of new patients alongside the rising mortality rate. The DGHS reported 157 new laboratory-confirmed dengue cases within the last 24 hours alone. This brings the cumulative number of recorded infections across the country to 5,317 since January. Medical experts warn that stagnant water from recent pre-monsoon showers has accelerated vector proliferation, driving up transmission rates.
The pressure on the healthcare infrastructure remains palpable, though recovery rates offer a glimmer of hope. Out of the 5,317 individuals diagnosed this year, a vast majority have successfully beaten the illness. The official press release indicated that 4,919 patients have been formally discharged from various medical facilities across the country, with 119 of those recoveries recorded within the last 24 hours.
Public health experts are urging municipalities to intensify mosquito eradication programmes, particularly focusing on larval source management. Residents are also being counselled to eliminate potential stagnant water reservoirs around their households to curb the outbreak.
Comments