Leptospirosis claims teener in Pangasinan
Four
people were killed and thousands forced to flee their homes as floods inundated
large parts of the northern Philippines the past two weeks, government reports
said.
Heavy
monsoon rains lashed the largely agricultural provinces for days, bringing
floods that left roads impassable and led about 3,000 people to be evacuated,
government civil defense officers said.
At
least four people died as a result of the rains, including a six-month old boy
who was buried by a landslide in Pangasinan, the officers said.
Social
welfare and relief agencies are delivering aid to affected areas while the
public works department is preparing to repair damaged infrastructure, said
Presidential spokesman Herminio Coloma.
Although
no storm is forecast to hit, the government weather station warned that
“monsoon rains which may trigger flash floods and landslides will be
experienced,” over large areas of the northern Philippines on Sunday.
The
Philippines is hit by about 20 typhoons and storms each year.
In Pangasinan, Health workers in the entire
province have been alerted on a possible spread of leptospirosis, following
days of flooding in this city and 13 other towns and the death of a teenager in
Mangaldan, recently.
Dr.
Policarpio Manuel, chief of the Pangasinan Provincial Hospital, confirmed last
week the hospital had dealt with two leptospirosis cases and that one of them –
Dexter Preztoza, 17, of Mangaldan – died last Monday.
“He
had fever for almost a week and his complexion turned to yellow. On Wednesday,
his body gave up,” Manuel said of Preztoza.
From
January 1 to July 20 this year, the Region 1 Medical Center (R1MC) has reported
28 leptospirosis cases.
Provincial
Health Officer Anna de Guzman said 16 of these cases are in this province,
including Preztoza.
Leptospirosis
is an infectious bacterial disease that occurs in rodents, dogs, and other
mammals and can be transmitted to humans.
The incidence of transmission of
the disease to humans occurs increasingly during floods when feces and urine
from infected rodents go with the water and threatens open wounds.
In
Dagupan City, Pangasinan mayor Belen Fernandez announced a
suspension of classes on Monday in all pre-school, elementary
and high schools both public and private
.
In
a statement in her Facebook account, Fernandez said lingering effects of the
monsoon shall continue to be felt with rain waters from the upstream flowing
into the city’s rivers, causing it to swell and threatening to inundate key
areas and the city’s major thoroughfares until today (Monday ), along with
the expected tidal rise.
“By
express authority provided under Section 2 of Executive Order No. 66, s. 2012
(Localized Cancellation or Suspension of Classes and Work in Government
Offices) as chairperson of the Dagupan City Disaster Risk Reduction and
Management Council, I hereby order the suspension of all classes in all
pre-school, elementary and high schools, both public and private, in the city
of Dagupan, July 20, 2015,” Fernandez said.
Meanwhile,
she reminded that regular work at the City Hall and all other government
offices within the city’s territorial jurisdiction shall not be affected by
this declaration.
Suspension
of classes in tertiary schools shall be left at the discretion of the
presidents or administrators of their respective colleges and universities, she
said. – With reports fromLiezle Basa Inigo
No comments:
Post a Comment