Colombia's health ministry yesterday declared a public health emergency owing to the circulation of yellow fever in several regions of the country.
In a statement, officials said that, since September 2024, the country has recorded 75 cases, 34 of them fatal, for a case-fatality rate of 45.3%. Cases have been reported in nine departments, though most are in Tolima, located in the Andean region in the west central part of the country. The deaths were in eight districts, most of them in Tolima.

The ministry urged all people ages 9 months and older to be vaccinated against yellow fever.
Steady expansion, threat to urban areas
"The outbreak has shown progressive expansion, especially in areas of the Amazon basin, the Magdalena River, and departments such as Meta, in a short period of time," the ministry said. "Furthermore, cases have occurred in territories where they had not been historically reported, such as the municipality of Neira, Caldas, located in the coffee-growing region."
Though urban transmission in Colombia hasn't been reported since 1929, some cases have been detected in populated centers and on the outskirts of cities that have low population densities, highlighting the risk of spread to larger urban areas, the ministry said.
The government took several steps in September to contain the spread, including forming and sending vaccination teams to all affected areas.
In late March, the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) issued an epidemiologic alert about a rise in yellow fever cases in countries in the Americas, including Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, and Peru. And earlier this week, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a level 2 travel notice for yellow fever in South America.