NNC
airs alarm on rising obesity among Cordi folks
BAGUIO CITY – The National Nutrition
Council-Cordillera Administrative Region aired concern over increasing obesity
and overweight cases among age brackets amidst improving advocacy among
concerned government agencies, local agencies and private partners on good
nutrition and healthy lifestyle.
Rita Papey, NNC-CAR
Regional Nutrition Program Coordinator, said that while the Cordillera is
faring good in the management of under nutrition, the continuous increase in
overweight and obese cases regionwide is alarming and should serve as a wake-up
call for concerned stakeholders to refocus their programs in reducing obesity
in the region.
“Malnutrition refers to both under- and
over-nourished individuals who must be given attention to be enable them to
embrace good nutrition practices that will improve their nutritional status for
better quality of life,” Papey said.
For
pre-schoolchildren, there are 6.1 out of 100 Cordillerans who are obese which
is much higher than the national average of 5 for every 100 pre-schoolchildren.
There are 7.8 out of
100 schoolchildren in the Cordillera who are obese compared to the 5.9 out of
100 children national obesity average.
On cases of
obesity among those in the adolescent age bracket, there are 11.6 out of 100
adolescents in the Cordillera who are said to be obese or overweight compared
to the national average of 8.3 in the same age bracket.
The incidents of
obesity among adults in the Cordillera is 34.5 out of 100 individuals compared
to the national average of 31.1 percent as of last year.
Papey attributed
the continuous increase in obesity cases regionwide to the lifestyle of people,
especially those living in urban centers, because of the emergency of
ready-to-cook and processed foods which has now become the choice of people for
convenience, among others.
According to
her, the Cordillera placed second to the National Capital Region (NCR) among
all age brackets in terms of the existence of obese and overweight cases in
their respective areas of jurisdiction, thus, the need for people to go back to
the old ways of life by eating the right kind of food which are nutritious and
contain the right kind of minerals and vitamins for maximum growth and the
attainment of the optimum development potential for individuals.
Papey said it
will be uphill climb for stakeholders to inform and educate the parents on the
importance of embracing good nutrition for their children to avoid obesity and
overweight, considering that they will be prone to contracting dreaded diseases
that will significantly compromise their health condition.
She said it is high
time that people learn to go back to the basics of life by eating the right kind
of food and allowing children to be exposed to eating nutritious food for the
benefit of their growth.
UC to
test GIS dengue surveillance system
BAGUIO CITY – This city will serve as
pilot test area of first geographic information system-based dengue and
epidemiology system to provide the public with real time picture of dengue
fever cases in 128 city barangays for policy and decision-makers.
Engineer Nathaniel
Lubrica, project leader of the University of the Cordilleras (UC) dengue surveillance
system team, said work for operationalization of the system will start in a few
next weeks and will be completed within five months for pilot test and
correction of operational glitches.
The project is
spearheaded by the UC College of Engineering, in coordination with the
Philippine Council for Health Research and Development of the Department of
Science and Technology, Dept. of Health, the City Health Services Office,
Cordillera Health Research and Development Consortium and universities and colleges in the region.
“We want to provide
the public with a clearer picture of the dengue surveillance down to the
barangays for the people to be aware of the status of dengue in their
respective places. The GIS-based surveillance system will be able to identify
areas where there are clustering of dengue cases and where there are outbreaks
among others,” Lubrica said.
He added the project
will serve as start for the system but there will be future projects that will
be undertaken to make the system an intelligent one and conform with needs of
the times.
The UC study group
obtained a P500,000 grant from the PCHRD for the implementation of the dengue
surveillance system project to serve as a template in establishment of similar
surveillance software’s in other areas interested to put in place such system
for real time monitoring purposes and guidance to policy-makers and
decision-makers in local and national levels.
Dr. Alexei Marrero,
Medical Officer of the Cordillera office of the DOH-CAR, said adaption of the
dengue surveillance system is a welcome development on the part of the health
agency because it will provide an avenue where health experts will be able to
see for themselves a clearer picture of the prevalence of dengue cases in the
different barangays to allow the cascading of appropriate technical and medical
assistance to those that are really in need of help from the agency.
He said the system
will be lodged with the DOH-CAR so it would be able to closely monitor
prevalence of dengue fever cases in hot spots so assistance will be able to be
directly given to them.
Lubrica said upgrading
of the surveillance system will be a continuing process because the data to be
gathered will come from barangays although it will not be so accurate but what
is important is that there will be a system that will be put in place to serve
as basis to improve and innovate the system to conform with trends on the
proliferation of dengue and its adaptability to
weather conditions.
He said policy-makers
and decision-makers will have an easier time deciding interventions that will
be set in dengue-affected areas because the system will also recommend
activities that should be undertaken.
Dengue CAR
cases down but still cause of concern
BAGUIO CITY — The number of dengue cases in
the Cordillera is decreasing but is still in an alarming level, the Dept. of
Health – Cordillera Regional Office bared.
DOH-CAR Medical
Officer Alexei Marrerro said there are
8,558 cases recorded as of Sept. 24 or a 16 percent increase compared to the
same period last year.
The figures showed a
slight decrease from 25 percent two weeks ago, Marrero added.
“Cases normally rise
during the rainy months of May to August and start slowing down in
September,” Marrerro said.
In the same interview,
DOH-CAR Entomologist III Ursula Segundo said the female Aedes aegypti mosquito,
the main vector that transmits the virus that causes dengue, is now found to be
highly adaptive with changes in temperature and environment.
“Clusters can now be
found in urban areas as much as in the rural areas and they can now breed in
the clean portion of dirty waters,” Segundo said.
“The peak used to be
during the rainy season, but now, mosquitoes adapted to breed until the
summer,” she added.
Segundo said the DOH
and Saint Louis University (SLU) are conducting a larvicide assessment in the
locality to kill the vector mosquito.
In the conduct of the
assessment, they found out that a larvicide labelled “Kiti-kiti
X” (mosquito larvae X) tested very effective in helping reduce the
mutation of the vector mosquito.
“The assessment of
Kiti-kiti X is helpful in the reduction of dengue mosquitoes,” Segundo
said.
“The calcium-based
larvicide powder (calcium hydroxide plus clinoptilolite) is added to ovitraps
to kill mosquito larvae before they develop into adult mosquitoes.
The larvicide remains
effective for four weeks,” she added.
City Health Services
Office Medical Officer Nelson Hora said that after a series of vector
surveillance and information, education campaigns (IECs) in barangays and
schools in Baguio, they found out that the leading breeding sites of vector
mosquitoes are drums with water, followed by pails with water, and the
water-retaining leaves of fortune plants and bromeliads.
Hora also recommended
schools to use pyrethroid-based insectides to treat their curtains and to
conduct regular search and destroy activities twice daily.
“Search and destroy
activities should be done applying the 9:00 o’clock and 4:00 o’clock habit as
the vector mosquitoes are highly infectious two hours after sunrise and two
hours before sunset”, he added.
Hora reiterated that
Dengue symptoms are very much like those of flu and advised the public not to
wait for rashes to appear as these do not always manifest in all persons who
have contracted the virus.
Hora said laboratory
exams are free for suspected dengue patients at the CHSO.
Gov’t
agencies, LGUs told: Establish lactating
stations
BAGUIO CITY
– Most government agencies and local government units were found to be
not compliant to establishment of lactating stations for breastfeeding
employees and clients in their respective offices, a top nutrition official
said here.
She
added other reasons cited by officials of government agencies on this concern
is the claim that all of their female workers are already beyond the lactating
years and that establishing a lactating station is useless.
“We understand the predicament of our line
agency and local officials on the establishment of lactating stations but we
have to point out to them the importance of the lactating stations, especially
for their clients who are breastfeeding their babies,” Papey stressed.
On
the other hand, the NNC-CAR official revealed that based on the inspection done
by the officials and employees of the Department of labor and Employment –
Cordillera on the compliance of private establishments to the putting up of
lactating stations in their respective businesses, there were 37 establishments
that were found to have been compliant to the said requirement.
Under
the Milk Code of the Philippines, government and private offices are mandated
to put up a lactating station within their buildings for the use of
breastfeeding employees and clients.
Papey
urged government agencies, local government units and private establishments
that have not yet set aside a room in their buildings exclusively for lactating
stations to comply with the provisions of the Milk code of the Philippines.
According
to her, putting up lactating stations in government and private offices
provides convenience for breastfeeding mothers transacting business with them
considering that they will be given a chance to relax and breastfeed their
babies, instead of exposing their breasts to the public while their babies are
sucking milk which will not be good in the view of others.
The NNC-CAR official said she hoped there will
be more government offices and local government units that will realize the
importance of lactating stations in their respective buildings so that the
concerns of their breastfeeding employees and clients will be effectively and
efficiently addressed and for the privacy of lactating mothers to be upheld and
allow them
the use of such lactating stations while doing business in the said offices.
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