No Dengue Outbreak or Unusual Mosquito-Borne Illness Activity, Government Says

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Maurice Merchant cabinet_press_briefing

Cabinet has been advised that there is no dengue outbreak and no unusual increase in mosquito-borne illnesses in Antigua and Barbuda, based on current surveillance and laboratory-confirmed data.

The update was provided by Health Minister Sir Molwyn Joseph during Wednesday’s Cabinet meeting and outlined at Thursday’s post-Cabinet media briefing by Director General of Communications Maurice Merchant.

“The minister told Cabinet that, based on current epidemiological surveillance and laboratory-confirmed data, all indicators for dengue and other arboviral illnesses remain within expected baseline levels,” Merchant said.

Merchant said the data shows a decline in confirmed dengue cases over the past several years, with no cases recorded so far for 2026.

“In 2022, there were two cases of dengue recorded. In 2023, there was a spike of 106 cases. That fell in 2024 to 18 cases. In 2025, 11 cases were recorded, and so far for this year, there are no cases that have been recorded,” he said.

He said other mosquito-borne illnesses, including Zika, chikungunya, Oropouche fever and yellow fever, have also remained at low or zero levels in recent years.

“For Zika virus, only two confirmed cases last year, no confirmed cases in 2022, 2023, 2024 or so far for this year,” Merchant said. “As it relates to chikungunya, Oropouche fever and yellow fever, zero laboratory-confirmed cases reported from 2020 to so far this year.”

Merchant said Cabinet concluded that the figures confirm arboviral activity remains “low and controlled,” with no indication of sustained transmission or outbreak conditions.

He said the Ministry of Health’s surveillance systems remain fully active to ensure early detection and rapid response should disease patterns change.

“The public will be promptly informed if surveillance data indicate any increase in risk,” Merchant said.

While reassuring residents that there is no cause for alarm, he said the ministry continues to encourage routine mosquito-control measures, including eliminating standing water and using personal protection.

“The ministry remains committed to transparency, evidence-based public health action, and the continued protection of the health and well-being of all Antiguans and Barbudans,” Merchant said.

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