These are the viruses that defined 2024

These are the viruses that defined 2024

From mpox to bird flu and beyond, multiple infectious disease outbreaks flared up around the world this year.

Dengue cases soared

It was a record year for dengue fever, a disease transmitted by mosquitoes. The Americas have amassed about 12.7 million cases as of early December. That’s about 90 percent of the roughly 14 million cases recorded around the world. Cases in the Americas alone are also more than double the previous global record of 5.3 million cases reported by the WHO just last year.

Climate change, El Niño and urbanization may have played a part in the massive outbreak, according to the WHO.

Rising temperatures may have boosted dengue transmission by around 18 percent in the Americas and Asia compared with what levels would have been in a world without warming, scientists reported in a paper posted this year at medRxiv.org. Depending on how high the average global temperature gets by 2050, transmission could become 40 to 57 percent higher on average than expected without climate change.

Mpox sparked a global emergency

A surge of mpox cases across Central Africa reached a tipping point that prompted the World Health Organization to declare the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern in August (SN: 9/7/24 & 9/21/24, p. 6).

Mpox, which can cause fever, muscle aches and a hallmark rash with painful pus-filled lesions, has long been a problem in parts of Africa. The Democratic Republic of Congo, where the first case was reported in 1970, is the center of the current outbreak. This year, the virus that causes mpox spread to previously unaffected countries including Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda.

As of early December, there have been nearly 60,000 confirmed and suspected cases in 20 countries and 60 deaths in 2024. Children have been particularly hard hit.

A health care worker checks on a 2-year-old child who is being treated for mpox at the Nyiragongo General Referral Hospital in the Democratic Republic of the Congo on August 14, 2024. The country is at the center of an mpox outbreak that has spread to other countries.© Guerchom Ndebo/WHO

Since late August, more than 170,000 vaccine doses have been distributed to Nigeria, Congo and Rwanda. On November 19, the United Nations authorized the first mpox vaccine for children age 1 and older.

The Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that around 10 million vaccine doses are needed to bring the outbreaks under control (SN: 9/19/24).

Bird flu made the jump to cows

The H5N1 outbreak that began spreading globally in 2021 continued to infect myriad wild birds, poultry and mammals this year (SN: 2/24/24, p. 14). And in late March, the virus jumped to an unexpected new animal: dairy cows.

The ongoing outbreak in U.S. dairy cows has hit more than 700 herds in 16 states, with infections causing symptoms such as reduced milk production and lack of appetite. The virus infects cows’ mammary glands, and studies suggest that contaminated milking equipment helps spread H5N1 from cow to cow (SN: 8/24/24, p. 9). High temperatures kill the virus, so pasteurized milk and cooked beef are safe to eat.

Multiple cows on a dairy farm eat hay while some black birds eat from the same hay piles
Dairy farms in at least 14 states have reported cases of bird flu in cattle, and one person exposed to an infected cow has fallen ill. The risk to people remains low, but researchers are keeping a close eye on the outbreak.Dusty Pixel photography/Getty Images

As of early December, 58 farm workers have tested positive for the virus after exposure to infected livestock. In August, one person in Missouri contracted the virus despite having no contact with cows or poultry. Another person living in the same household showed signs of a past infection, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced in October. The finding hints that the virus can sometimes, but rarely, spread person-to-person through very close contact. Researchers are keeping a close eye on whether new mutations arise that could help the virus spread easily among people.

Polio reared its head in Gaza

In September, the WHO launched a massive polio vaccination campaign across Gaza after wastewater samples tested positive for poliovirus and an infected 10-month-old boy developed paralysis in his left leg. Because paralysis from polio is rare, a single case suggests hundreds of other infections. Israel’s military offensive against Hamas has destroyed much of Gaza’s health care and water treatment infrastructure, which has likely helped the virus to spread. Overall, 556,774 kids were fully vaccinated, a coverage rate of 94 percent, the WHO reported in November. Intense bombardment and mass displacement in northern Gaza cut off access to many areas, leaving up to 10,000 children there not fully vaccinated.

A woman administers an oral polio vaccine to a young boy.
A health care worker gives a child in Gaza an oral vaccine for polio in October during a World Health Organization campaign.WHO

Oropouche fever became deadly

The Pan American Health Organization issued a health alert in August after an increase of confirmed cases of Oropouche fever. The virus that causes the disease — which is spread via insect bites and typically presents flulike symptoms — hit new parts of South America and the Caribbean. Guyana, the Dominican Republic and Cuba all reported their first-ever cases, as did some Brazilian states. It also became deadly for the first time, causing two fatalities and a stillbirth in Brazil this summer (SN: 11/30/24, p. 15).

a picture of a midge, which is a very small fly, that transmits the Oropouche virus
Oropouche virus is primarily spread by infected Culicoides paraensis midges. These very small biting flies are only a few millimeters in length.CDC

Triple E hit the East Coast

Health officials recorded 16 cases of eastern equine encephalitis, or Triple E, across eight states along the U.S. East Coast. This mosquito-borne viral infection pops up every year in eastern and Gulf Coast states. The virus normally circulates in waterfowl, and occasionally makes the jump to horses and people. Most human cases go undetected because most people don’t develop symptoms. Those who do might have fever, body aches and joint pain. But in about 5 percent of cases, the virus invades the central nervous system, causing headaches, seizures or behavioral changes. About a third of people with severe disease die. All reported cases in 2024 were neuro­invasive, and three people died.

A false-color electron micrograph of a mosquito's salivary gland that carries the virus that causes eastern equine encephalitis.
In this false-color transmission electron micrograph of a mosquito’s salivary glands, the virus that causes eastern equine encephalitis appears red. In 2024, the rare disease infected at least 16 people in the United States — severe cases that resulted in three deaths.

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