DOH ups vaccination in 4 regions; deadly JE cases now 24 in Cordi
>> Wednesday, February 27, 2019
By
Pamela Mariz Geminiano
BAGUIO CITY -- The
Dept. of Health has started to administer Japanese Encephalitis vaccines to
children in the Cordillera Administrative Region, one of the four pilot regions
in the country.
"We will
be conducting a house-to-house immunization for Japanese Encephalitis (JE)
virus for children ages nine to 59 months old in the Cordillera as well in
regions 1, 2 and 3," DOH-CAR OIC regional director Dr. Amelita Pangilinan
said Tuesday.
The DOH
targets to administer the vaccine to around 174, 032 babies and toddlers.
Pangilinan
said Cordillera was included as a pilot area due to recorded JE cases in its
areas.
In 2018,
Cordillera had 24 laboratory-confirmed cases, with Baguio City having five
cases; Kalinga, 5; Benguet, 5; Ifugao,3; Apayao, 3; Abra, 2; Mountain Province,
1.
From 2015 to
2017, there were 36 laboratory-confirmed cases.
Pangilinan
said the World Health Organization (WHO) has recommended the inclusion of JE in
the national immunization schedules aside from those previously given free by
the government in state-health institutions.
JE is a fatal
illness that affects children.
"If you
survive, there could be neurological side effects,”Pangilinan said, but noted
that the disease can be prevented by getting vaccinated.
She urged
parents to bring their children to nearest health centers to avoid the
increasing number of cases of the virus.
"Parents
should not be scared of the vaccine, there were 400 million doses of vaccines
that have been used for the same purpose," she said.
"Let us
avail the free vaccine that the government is providing. This is at no cost and
each one of our children is entitled to the free vaccine," she added.
JE
vaccines are used to be given by private doctors only at P3,500 to P4,000 a
shot based on the WHO’s recommendation.
The DOH,
however, is looking at the possibility of adding it to the list of free
vaccines provided free to babies and toddlers by the government.
JE is a
mosquito-borne viral infection transmitted by the bite of an infected female
culex mosquito, attacking victims after sunset and before sunrise.
Culex
mosquito is a brown-colored mosquito that breeds locally in rice fields, ground
pools, water hyacinth ponds, slow streams, irrigation ditches and canals.
Adult female
culex mosquitos strongly feed on pigs, but also feed on birds and humans.
With health
workers doing a massive house-to-house vaccination giving anti-measles, the
same health workers would also be giving JE vaccination. -- PNA
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