Abstract:
Background: Dengue is the major mosquito-borne disease in Sri Lanka. After its first detection in January 2020,
COVID-19 has become the major health issue in Sri Lanka. The impact of public health measures, notably restrictions
on movement of people to curb COVID-19 transmission, on the incidence of dengue during the period March 2020
to April 2021 was investigated.
Methods: The incidence of dengue and COVID-19, rainfall and the public movement restrictions implemented to
contain COVID-19 transmission were obtained from Sri Lanka government sources. A Seasonal Autoregressive Integrated
Moving Average (SARIMA) model was used to predict the monthly dengue incidence from March 2020 to April
2021 for each of the country’s 25 districts based on five years of pre-pandemic data, and compared with the actual
recorded incidence of dengue during this period. Ovitrap collections of Aedes larvae were performed in Jaffna city in
the Jaffna district from August 2020 to April 2021 and the findings compared with similar collections made in the prepandemic
period from March 2019 to December 2019.
Results: The recorded numbers of dengue cases for every month from March 2020 to April 2021 in the whole country
and for all 25 districts over the same period were lower than the numbers of dengue cases predicted from data for
the five years (2015–2019) immediately preceding the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of dengue cases recorded
nationwide represented a 74% reduction from the predicted number of dengue cases for the March 2020 to April
2021 period. The numbers of Aedes larvae collected from ovitraps per month were reduced by 88.6% with a lower
proportion of Ae. aegypti than Ae. albopictus in Jaffna city from August 2020 until April 2021 compared with March
2019 to December 2019.
Conclusion: Public health measures that restricted movement of people, closed schools, universities and offices to
contain COVID-19 transmission unexpectedly led to a significant reduction in the reported numbers of dengue cases
in Sri Lanka. This contrasts with findings reported from Singapore. The differences between the two tropical islands
have significant implications for the epidemiology of dengue. Reduced access to blood meals and lower vector densities,
particularly of Ae. aegypti, resulting from the restrictions on movement of people, are suggested to have contributed
to the lower dengue incidence in Sri Lanka.