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Mosquito crackdown as Japanese encephalitis cases in Hong Kong reach three-year high

Efforts to eradicate mosquitoes have been stepped up after this year has already seen the highest number of cases of Japanese encephalitis in three years.

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Tsoi lap-fu, officer from the Food and Environmental Hygiene Department, showing the mosquito trapping device during a Japanese encephalitis anti-mosquito measures operation in Tuen Mun. Photo: K. Y. Cheng

Efforts to eradicate mosquitoes have been stepped up after this year has already seen the highest number of cases of Japanese encephalitis in three years.

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The Food and Environmental Hygiene Department launched a 42-day campaign following confirmation of the latest case of the potentially deadly disease a week ago when a 36-year-old British expatriate fell ill.

The man, who lives with his family in Tuen Mun, brought the number of locally acquired cases this year to four - compared to two last year and just one in 2012.

Traps to collect data have been installed at three locations within a two-kilometre radius of the man's home, and the area has been sprayed with mosquito repellant.

Samples from the traps will be sent to the Department of Health for virus analysis.

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"We have already cleaned up 46 potential Japanese encephalitis-breeding areas within the two-kilometre radius of the British man's residence," said the head of the department's mosquito risk assessment and advisory unit, Leung Chi-wah.

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