Friday, November 14, 2025

5 cases of leprosy detected in Oaxaca’s Tehuantepec region

Health officials in Oaxaca have identified five cases of leprosy in the state’s Isthmus of Tehuantepec region.

The infectious disease that damages the skin and peripheral nerves has not been considered a public health problem in Mexico since 2018.

It can cause irreparable damage if not treated early enough, but authorities said that all five cases have been detected in time and the patients have responded positively to treatment.

According to the officials, two of the patients are located in Juchitán, two in Asunción Ixtaltepec and one in San Blas Tenampa.

This is not the first time the Isthmus of Tehuantepec has seen an outbreak of the disease. Five cases were detected in 2018: three in Santiago Niltepec, one in Xadani and one in Juchitán.

The region saw 170 cases of leprosy from 2000 to 2019, lasting from a year and a half to two years. The majority were successfully treated,

The most at-risk population was the elderly, with 30.7% of the patients aged 65 years or older. Children aged 5-14 years old were the least affected by the disease.

Since 2018, Mexico has maintained a rate of one case per every 10,000 residents nationally, prompting federal authorities to deem leprosy no longer a public health concern.

The states with the highest rates of the disease in that year were Guerrero, Oaxaca, Jalisco, Sinaloa and Michoacán.

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Sillouetted people sit at glowing neon slot machines

Following Mexico’s lead, US sanctions cartel-linked casinos across Mexico

0
A joint operation between the two countries has shuttered gambling houses in Ensenada, Nogales, Mazatlán and other cities, leaving them cut off from global financial system.
Marco Rubio in Canada

US Secretary of State Rubio rules out unilateral military action in Mexico

0
The secretary's comments seemed timed to quell media reports claiming the U.S. has imminent plans to take unilateral action in Mexico against the cartels.
A school of fish swim past a coral reef in Cabo Pulmo National Park, Baja California Sur

The Gulf of California is getting hotter. What does that mean for the people and fish that live there?

0
In a new study, Mexican scientists found that species are disappearing from "the world's aquarium," impacting ecosystems and the fishers who depend on them.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity