Abstract

The government of Thailand has invested heavily in community-based dengue fever prevention campaigns, yet community participation has been inadequate to prevent transmission. This ethnographic study explored local understandings of dengue in rural northeast Thailand, and their implications for adherence to government-initiated prevention measures centred around mosquito control. While community members recognised the most severe manifestation of the disease – dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF) – as life threatening, they were unaware of the existence of the milder form of dengue fever (DF) that makes up the majority of cases. Consequently, milder fevers were believed to be something other than dengue, such that dengue was perceived as a rare illness, hindering participation in prevention. Furthermore, a local illness category, khai mak mai (‘fruit fever’) complicated the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of dengue fever, as people viewed it as both difficult to distinguish from dengue, and untreatable by biomedicine.

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