Hospitals in Sri Lanka are overwhelmed as the government struggles to control the virus which can develop into a deadly hemorrhagic fever.

An outbreak of dengue virus has killed around 300 people so far this year in Sri Lanka and hospitals are stretched to capacity, health officials said on Monday.
They blamed recent monsoon rains and floods that have left pools of stagnant water and rotting rain-soaked trash, ideal breeding sites for mosquitoes that carry the virus.
Srilanka 105,000 people affected to Dengue & 301 people dead. pic.twitter.com/OC5k7QiErB
— RaviDeSilva (@RaviDeSilva7) July 25, 2017
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies are scaling up emergency assistance to Sri Lanka along with the Sri Lanka Red Cross to help contain the outbreak.
The number of #dengue cases has topped 100,000 in #SriLanka. Were scaling up assistance to help contain the country's worst-ever outbreak. pic.twitter.com/8IkFgBjmYQ
— IFRC (@Federation) July 24, 2017
"Dengue patients are streaming into overcrowded hospitals that are stretched beyond capacity and struggling to cope, particularly in the country's hardest hit western province," Red Cross said in a statement.
According to the World Health Organization, dengue is one of the world's fastest growing diseases, endemic in 100 countries, with as many as 390 million infections annually.
Early detection and treatment save lives when infections are severe, particularly for young children.
Health Alert !
— Sri Lanka Tweet (@SriLankaTweet) July 22, 2017
Dengue Fever reaches epidemic level. 101,698 Cases & 290 Deaths.
Keep Ur place Clean #LKA #SriLanka #DengueSL #News pic.twitter.com/OHQduo4r3W
The Sri Lankan government is struggling to control the virus, which causes flu-like symptoms and can develop into the deadly hemorrhagic dengue fever.
The ministry of health said the number of dengue infections has climbed above 100,000 since the start of 2017, with 296 deaths.
"Ongoing downpours and worsening sanitation conditions raise concerns the disease will continue to spread," the Red Cross/Red Crescent said.
Its assistance comes a week after Australia announced programmes to help control dengue fever in Sri Lanka.
Australia's FAM @JulieBishopMP 2day announced life-saving support through the #WHO to help combat a severe dengue outbreak in #Srilanka . pic.twitter.com/5RmAhHI1MY
— AnumehaThomas (@ThomasAnumeha) July 20, 2017
"Dengue is endemic here, but one reason for the dramatic rise in cases is that the virus currently spreading has evolved, and people lack the immunity to fight off the new strain," Novil Wijesekara, head of health at the Sri Lanka Red Cross said in a statement.