Malaria cases down in Cordillera Region
>> Tuesday, December 3, 2013
BAGUIO CITY - - Malaria cases have
drastically gone down in the Cordillera the past few years.
Department of Health-
Cordillera regional office entomologist II Ursula Segundo bared this saying
malaria cases continue to go down and for this year no indigenous
or local transmission of cases has been recorded by the DOH.
In 2012, seven malaria
cases (three from Apayao and four from Kalinga) were recorded in the
region.
Segundo also reported
that Baguio City and Benguet have long been declared as malaria-free.
Abra is also set to
attain the same if no cases will be recorded in the province until the end of
this year.
A province or city is
declared as malaria-free if there are no recorded indigenous cases in the area
for at least five consecutive years.
For Ifugao and
Mountain Province, she also disclosed that there were no indigenous
malaria cases recorded cases since 2012 and 2011, respectively.
Segundo said malaria
can be fatal but preventable as she reiterated the health department’s
call for a stronger partnership among all sectors especially among local
government units in malaria elimination efforts.
Malaria is a
mosquito-borne infectious disease that is commonly transmitted by a bite from
an infected female Anopheles mosquito.
The disease causes
symptoms which usually include fever and headache.
It can be transferred
from an afflicted person to another or by an afflicted person from one area to
another, if not properly monitored, diagnosed and treated.
Infants and pregnant
women are the most vulnerable groups, she said.
For protection, she
advised use of mosquito nets.
This
November, the DOH, in line with the government's goal of malaria-free
Philippines by 2020, headed observance of Malaria Awareness Week to gain
countrywide support and spread the knowledge that malaria, through fatal, is
preventable.
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