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A sign reading “We Do Not Have Repellent” is displayed on the window of a store in Buenos Aires on Tuesday. Photo: AFP

As dengue outbreak rages, Argentina runs out of mosquito repellent

  • Shortages have led to supermarket brawls, rationing and the rise of home-made concoctions
  • With 129 deaths so far this year, Argentina has seen a 10-fold increase compared to the same period last year

Insect repellent has become a hot commodity in Argentina, which is besieged by dengue-carrying mosquitoes and facing shortages that have sparked supermarket brawls, rations and home-made concoctions.

The country is one of the worst hit by an outbreak of dengue sweeping Latin America and the Caribbean, attributed to a muggy summer that has been intensified by the El Nino climate phenomenon.

The outbreak in the middle of an economic crisis, in a country with strict importation controls, has led to a severe shortage of mosquito repellent.

Some businesses have opened dedicated WhatsApp channels to tell clients when they get some in. Others impose rations of three products per person.

A public health worker fumigates an area as part of a campaign against dengue-promoting mosquitoes in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on Friday. Photo: AP

In one viral video, a man appears in a park surrounded by a cloud of mosquitos, explaining how a mixture of water and low-cost local shampoo brand Plusbelle repels the flying pests.

“I did everything home-made,” said Laura Di Costa, 56, who was unable to find repellent and ended up in hospital with dengue, which causes joint and bone pain, earning it the nickname “breakbone fever”.

Dengue can provoke haemorrhagic fever in severe cases, and death.

“I try not to go out much, I don’t take my grandchildren to the park so as not to be in the grass,” added Di Costa.

Argentina’s Milei wants China out, America in

With 129 deaths so far this year, Argentina has seen a 10-fold increase compared to the same period last year, according to official figures.

Brazil has seen an 81 per cent increase in cases, the biggest in the region, according to the Pan American Health Organisation, which has recorded 3.5 million cases – triple what was seen in 2023.

“Probably this will be the worst dengue season [in the region],” said Jarbas Barbosa, director of the Pan American Health Organisation.

After facing criticism from the opposition for its “absence” amid the crisis, Libertarian President Javier Milei’s government this week removed import taxes on mosquito repellents.

In the meantime, sprays and creams are selling for around US$40 apiece, rather than the usual US$5, a painful sum for a population already dealing with annual inflation of 276 per cent.

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