Hospitals
full; hotel bookings cancelled
BAGUIO CITY – Hospital here have been filled
here after dengue cases shot up with
nine deaths, four from this city and five from nearby town of La Trinidad,
Benguet with 1,333 and 977 cases of dengue from January to July 23,
respectively.
The Dept. of
Health-Cordillera said this was a lot higher as compared with 270 cases with
four deaths same period in 2015.
Five of those who died
were from La Trinidad, while the four deaths are from Baguio, as more dengue
cases were being registered in hospitals.
Baguio General
Hospital and Medical Center (BGHMC) had the biggest number of dengue patients
in the city. Most of them came from other provinces.
A total of 633 cases
reported in Baguio came from the provinces of Benguet, La Union and Pangasinan.
The remaining 700 are all from this city.
Due to the uptrend in
cases needing hospital confinement, the BGHMC has put up three large tents
outside the hospital to accommodate all patients.
The City Health
Services Office has recorded 1,199 dengue cases from January to July, a 500
percent increase from the 239 cases of the same period last year.
This, as Baguio
tourism might suffer from the high incidence of dengue in the city, an official
warned.
“We could not allow a
meningococcemia-like situation in the city, Councilor Elmer Datuin, chairperson
of the Committee on Tourism, Special Events Parks and Playgrounds,” said.
Hotels have
begun complaining of accommodation cancellations, Datuin said, as he raised the
issue to the city council this week in front of health officials here.
The concern, he
said, is a declaration of an “outbreak.” “Let us be careful and prevent the
increase as it already creates a big blow to the tourism industry,”
Datuin added.
Datuin has urged
that there should be a closer look at the data and be circumspect in declaring
an “outbreak” as it could affect the city's tourism revenue.
What hoteliers
and tourism stakeholders want, Datuin said, is an assurance from city
government that dengue is being met head on.
Baguio’s economy
is primarily perked up by tourism via the service sector.
There were
already two recorded deaths from dengue of the 1,199 cases since the start of the
year — a 58-year-old female from Asin Road and a 20-year-old male
from Barangay Camp 7.
Mayor Mauricio
Domogan said he feared increase in cases might affect the city’s main economic
activity but wishfully thinks by “not that much”.
Baguio Convention and
Visitors Bureau chief Anthony de Leon thinks it is more of an image problem
than dengue’s actual effect on the city’s tourism situation.
“Tourism is not
hurt but it doesn’t look good for Baguio City.”
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