Bhargava, AnuragChatterjee, Biswaroop2019-09-252019-09-252011-03-112007-010975-5691http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/176862The 2005-6 epidemic of Chikungunya fever highlights the weaknesses of public health in India. The failure to control mosquitoes, and the illnesses transmitted by them, has resulted in recurrent outbreaks all over the country. This is inevitable given the larger scenario: neglect of the basic requirements of health; poor political support for health; a weak public health capacity; centralised programmes for control based on selective interventions, and poorly-planned development projects which have created conditions ideal for the outbreak of disease. All these issues are concerns for public health ethics and must be addressed to tackle the problems posed by mosquito-borne as well as other communicable diseases. “If disease is an expression of individual life under unfavourable conditions, then epidemics must be indicative of mass disturbances of mass life … Epidemics resemble great warning signs on which the true statesman is able to read that the evolution of his nation has been disturbed to a point which even a careless policy is no longer allowed to overlook.”engWith permission of the license/copyright holderpublic goodhealth ethicsaccountabilityBioethicsSocial ethicsSexual orientation/genderMedical ethicsHealth ethicsChikungunya fever,falciparum malaria, dengue fever, Japanese encephalitisArticle