This article was originally published on 25 September 2022 and updated with new information.
A non-exhaustive list of things you might miss out on if you contract dengue fever: birthdays, job opportunities, social gatherings.
For Marklin Ang, it was his first day of National Service enlistment.
The first time he caught dengue, the burning fever and excruciating back aches that struck him in the middle of the night were the least of his concerns. Hospitalised, Marklin remembers pleading with the doctors and nurses to be discharged.
"I didn't want to be potentially charged for not turning up."
He would learn that that would be the least of his worries. Because Marklin caught dengue again. And again.
The unseen toll of this infamous virus is unimaginable to many. We are warned against a "major dengue outbreak" of historic proportions, piling onto existing Covid infections. It's enough to threaten our healthcare system and low herd immunity.
Despite the flurry of advertisements bombarding our bus stops and HDB lift lobbies, the touchier, more nebulous effects of dengue remain less publicised. But what exactly are they?
Red Zone Scare
It's a pretty terrible time to catch dengue, or any contagious disease for that matter.
Amid wave after wave of Covid variants and lockdowns, many Singaporeans are simply trying to figure out the best way to stay afloat now in a state of endemicity.
Here's the problem with dengue: it's both incredibly probable and improbable. As of July 2022, there are documented to be at least 341 active clusters, with 120 of them classified as high-risk areas that host 10 or more dengue cases.
Just as we have seemingly turned a corner with Covid, we now face the threat of a major dengue outbreak. In some parts of Singapore, it's happening within the safest places we know: our homes.
As the National Dengue Prevention Campaign told us for years, outbreaks could spawn from a number of things—unturned vases and pots, overlooked stagnant water on rims of pails, roof gutters, or just plain bad luck.
By now, dengue's debilitating effects are well-known to most of us, having been drilled into us since childhood. What isn't discussed as much is how remarkably stressful it can be.