Chikungunyarelated Fatality Rates, Mauritius, India, and Reunion IslandTo the Editor: During the epidemic of chikungunya virus infection that occurred on Reunion Island in 2005-06, we reported an overmortality corresponding to the epidemic peak, which was estimated by comparing observed and expected deaths (1).The excess was similar to the number of deaths related to chikungunya infection reported by death certifi cates (2).The case-fatality rate (CFR) on Reunion Island was estimated to be 1/1,000 population.According to Beesoon et al.(3), the fatality rate attributable to chikungunya infection was much higher on Mauritius: 743 deaths in excess of expected deaths led to a CFR of ≈4.5%, with 15,760 confi rmed or suspected cases for 2005 and 2006 as reported in this letter.A similar CFR of 4.9% can be calculated for the city of Ahmedabad, India, during the 2006 chikungunya epidemic (4).This 45-to 49-fold difference could be explained by a greater severity of chikungunya infection in Mauritius or Ahmedabad that could be due to a mutating strain, differences in the preexisting conditions of patients, differences in the management of patients, or by coincident deaths in excess from other causes.
Suzanne Talbot, Sabine Tötemeyer, Masahiro Yamamoto, Akira Shizuo, Katherine Hughes, David Gray, Tom A. Barr, Pietro Mastroeni, Duncan J. Maskell, Clare Bryant
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