
Mainland Middle America

This section includes general information about health hazards
as reported by the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention. The region includes Belize,
Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua,
and Panama. It ranges from the deserts of the north to the tropical
rain forests of the southeast.
Of the arthropod-borne diseases, malaria
and cutaneous and mucocutaneous leishmaniasis
occur in all eight countries. Visceral leishmaniasis occurs in El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico. Onchocerciasis
(river blindness) is found in two small foci in the south of Mexico
and four dispersed foci in Guatemala. American
trypanosomiasis (Chagas' disease) has been reported to occur
in localized foci in rural areas in all eight countries. Bancroftian
filariasis is present in Costa Rica. Dengue
fever and Venezuelan equine encephalitis may occur in all countries.
The foodborne and waterborne diseases,
including amebic and bacillary dysenteries and other diarrheal diseases
and typhoid fever are very common throughout
the area. All countries except Panama reported cases of cholera
in 1996. Hepatitis A occurs throughout the
area, and hepatitis E has been reported in Mexico. Helminthic infections
are common. Paragoniasis (oriental lung fluke) has been reported
in Costa Rica, Honduras, and Panama. Brucellosis occurs in the northern
part of the area. Many Salmonella typhi infections from Mexico
and Shigella dysenterteriae type 1 infections from mainland
Middle America as a whole have been caused by drug-resistant enterobacteria.
Rabies in animals (usually dogs and bats)
is widespread throughout the area. Snakes may be a hazard in some
areas.
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