Why Indiaโs deadly dengue crisis is now no longer confined to the monsoons
Gurugram, India โ When Nitin Sharma developed a high fever in May, dengue was the last thing on his mind. The monsoon was still weeks away. Like many Indians, the 32-year-old software engineer from Gurugram, a business district outside New Delhi, had grown up believing dengue wa
Gurugram, India โ When Nitin Sharma developed a high fever in May, dengue was the last thing on his mind.
The monsoon was still weeks away. Like many Indians, the 32-year-old software engineer from Gurugram, a business district outside New Delhi, had grown up believing dengue was a disease that arrived with the rains and disappeared once the monsoon season ended.
So when headaches, severe body aches and fatigue forced him to visit a private hospital in Gurugram, he assumed he was suffering from a routine viral infection.
โI thought it would be some seasonal fever,โ Sharma said. โNobody in my family even considered dengue because it wasnโt monsoon season yet.โ
A blood test revealed otherwise. Doctors diagnosed him with dengue fever.
For nearly two weeks, Sharma remained away from work as weakness and fatigue persisted long after the fever subsided.
โWhat shocked me most was the timing,โ he said. โEarlier, if someone had a fever in April, dengue would have been the last thing we thought about.โ
Doctors across India say Sharmaโs experience is becoming increasingly common.

