A total of 15 dengue patients died and 3,123 were admitted to different hospitals in the country during the last 24 hours till 8am on Tuesday.
On September 20, Bangladesh witnessed 21 dengue deaths, the highest in a single day this year and it also saw the same highest figure on September 2.
"The death toll from dengue infection crossed the 900-mark as the authorities recorded 943 dengue deaths between January 1 and September 25 this year," a press release from the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) said.
"During the period, 724 dengue patients were hospitalised in Dhaka city while 2,349 were admitted to different hospitals outside it," the DGHS daily statement added.
"This year, 943 deaths, the highest in a year since dengue was detected in 2000, were reported from dengue disease while 281 died last year," the statement said.
With the new cases, the total number of patients rose to 1,93,881, the statement said, adding: "This year, some 1,82,782 patients were released from different hospitals out of the total patients."
"A total of 10,156 dengue patients are undergoing treatment at different hospitals. Of them, 3,581 are in Dhaka while 6,575 are outside of the capital city," it added.
The authorities have recorded the highest number of dengue-positive cases outside the capital in August this year, meaning the mosquito-borne disease gripped the entire country.
August witnessed 71,976 dengue-positive cases, the highest number of cases in a single month since the dengue outbreak began in 2000 in the country while 342 dengue-related deaths were reported in the current month, the DGHS statement said.
According to health experts, the vector-borne disease hit Dhaka city in 2000 subsequently the dengue-positive cases were detected in Dhaka city only.
But the dengue disease is changing its nature and it is gradually spreading across the country, they said, adding: "All 64 districts of the country have witnessed positive dengue cases."
As of September 26, the authorities recorded 70, 073 dengue-positive cases while 350 deaths from the mosquito-borne disease during the same period.
The prevalence of dengue cases in Bangladesh has increased 10 times since last year and the deaths have increased almost thrice, according to a health expert.
"Dengue-positive cases have increased 10 times and death three times between mid-September, 2022 and mid-September, 2023," Professor Dr Md Golam Sharower, head of the Department of Entomology, National Institute of Preventive and Social Medicine (NIPSOM), told a seminar recently.
While presenting the keynote paper, Sharower explained that with global warming, our country's environmental factors such as temperature, relative humidity and rainfall are increasing, all of which play a key role in increasing the reproductive capacity of the Aedes mosquito.
There are unplanned urbanization, industrialization and ancillary activities such as construction of multi-storey buildings blocking waterways, dumping old cars and turning cities into mosquito sanctuaries, he said.
The morphological, biological and behavioural changes that have occurred in Aedes mosquitoes as a result of all our unknown activities in mosquito breeding are highly favourable for Aedes mosquitoes to transmit the dengue virus, he elaborated.
According to the DGHS, Bangladesh reported 1,01,354 dengue cases, the second highest since dengue cases were detected in 2000, in 2019, 1,405 cases in 2020, 28,429 cases in 2021 and 62,382 cases in 2022.
It also added that Bangladesh recorded 179 dengue related deaths in 2019, seven deaths in 2020, 105 deaths in 2021 and 281 deaths, the second highest deaths, in 2022.