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Children react surrounded by a vapor cloud during a fumigation operation held by Dhaka City Corporation in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 12. REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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A female mosquito feeds blood for reproductive purposes at the entomology laboratory of Jahangirnagar University in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 6. Dengue is common in South Asia during the June-to-September monsoon season as the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which spreads the disease, thrives in stagnant water.
REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraREUTERS, BANGLADESH
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A researcher tests the efficacy and protection time of insect repellents against different species of mosquitoes at the entomology laboratory of Jahangirnagar University in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 6. The death toll from Bangladesh's outbreak in 2023 is 1,476 as of Nov. 12, with 291,832 infected, official data showed.
REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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Parents feed their dengue-infected child as they receive treatment at Mugda Medical College and Hospital in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 12. Hospitals have struggled to cope with the rising number of dengue patients in the densely populated South Asian country.
REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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A girl runs surrounded by a fumigation vapour cloud in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 12. This is the first year that dengue cases have been reported in all 64 districts of the country, whose total population is about 170 million.
REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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Medical Entomologist Professor Dr. Kabirul Bashar collects adult mosquitoes from the field at night to examine the changes in the behavior of Aedes aegypti in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 6. Bashar, an entomologist and zoology professor at Jahangirnagar University in Bangladesh, has spent much of his career studying mosquitoes and said he had never seen such a severe outbreak in his 25 years of... DHAKA, BANGLADESH
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Medical Entomologist Professor Dr. Kabirul Bashar works on identifying different mosquito species following taxonomic key under a microscope at the entomology laboratory of Jahangirnagar University in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 6. REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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A city worker fumigates as the mosquito-borne dengue infection worsens in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 12. REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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People pass by Mugda Medical College and Hospital gate which provides treatment to the dengue patients in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 12. Hospitals in Bangladesh have been overflowing with patients while dealing with a shortage of intravenous fluids, crucial for treating severe cases.
REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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Larvae of Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus in pictured in an abandoned container at Jahangirnagar University in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 6. REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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Fumigation machines line up at Dhaka South City Corporation Office to fumigate nearby areas to slow the spread of dengue virus in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 12. REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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Medical Entomologist, Professor Dr. Kabirul Bashar, works on Aedes aegypti mosquito at the entomology laboratory of Jahangirnagar University in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 6. REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
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Different stages of the Aedes aegypti mosquito's life cycle are shown at entomology laboratory of Jahangirnagar University in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 6. "Temperature, rainfall and other components are changing patterns due to climate change. We are seeing monsoon-like rain in mid-October, which is unusual," Bashar told Reuters. "These seasonal pattern changes are creating the ideal situation... DHAKA, BANGLADESH
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A patient assistant holds saline as the patient suffers from dengue fever and receives treatment at Mugda Medical College and Hospital in Dhaka, Bangladesh, October 12. REUTERS/Fatima Tuj JohoraDHAKA, BANGLADESH
