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Volume 357:2222-2225 November 29, 2007 Number 22
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Dengue and Yellow Fever — Challenges for the Development and Use of Vaccines
Thomas P. Monath, M.D.

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Dengue is an important human viral disease transmitted by insects. Although nearly half the world's population is at risk for infection and as many as 100 million cases occur annually,1 we have no antiviral drugs to treat it and no vaccines to prevent it. A closely related but much more lethal mosquito-borne virus, yellow fever, used to be one of the great scourges among humans. Although yellow fever is now largely controlled by vaccination, many regions are susceptible to a reemergence if the disease is introduced by travelers, and substantial recent problems with vaccine safety will no doubt change vaccination . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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Dr. Monath is a partner at the venture-capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers, Menlo Park, CA, and an adjunct professor at the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston.

An interview with Dr. Monath and a slide show are available at www.nejm.org.




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