DOH issues insecticide-laced anti-dengue ‘curtains’ in CAR
>> Sunday, June 23, 2019
BAGUIO
CITY -- The Department of Health in the Cordillera Administrative Region has
distributed “curtains” treated with insecticides in areas with high incidence
of dengue to avoid its spread. “We have distributed
rolls and rolls of treated curtain, volumes in high-risk areas with high cases.
The central office’s augmentation for more long-lasting insecticide-laden nets
has been also relayed,” Dr. Amelita Pangilinan, DOH-CAR acting regional
director, told the Philippine News Agency on Monday.
The nets would last four
to five years and must not be washed or it would lose its effectiveness by 20
percent, she said.
“Pagpagin
lang (Just dust it off),” Pangilinan said.
With the installation of
the treated nets on windows and doors, the mosquitoes would immediately die
once it touches the net.
Pangilinan said
mosquitos have changed their biting behavior and dengue-carrying mosquitos now
bite any time of the day.
“Mosquitoes should be
our number one enemies. They do not only cause dengue but also Zika, Japanese
encephalitis, and chikungunya,” Pangilinan said.
She said the best way to
rid of mosquitoes is to rid breeding sites, as the dengue virus has become a
year-round illness.
“It used to be that
there is a cyclical occurrence of dengue, but as early as January up to the
last day of December there are cases and the most common denominator seen or
the risk factor are the breeding sites of mosquitoes,” Pangilinan said.
For schools, the DOH has
written the Department of Education to allow the students not to use skirts but
wear long pants for protection.
The regional
Epidemiology Surveillance Unit of the DOH reported that the region recorded
2,025 dengue cases from January 1 to June 1 this year, which is a 53 percent
increase compared to the same period in 2018.
Benguet tops the number
of cases with 441, a 66 percent increase from the 266 recorded in the province
in 2018. There were also two deaths listed during the period.
Apayao comes second with
434 cases this year marking a 271 percent increase from the 177 incidences of
dengue in 2018.
Apayao is the hardest
hit by El Niño and residents stored water, which could become breeding grounds
of mosquitoes.
Ifugao has 221 cases as
against last year’s 37; Kalinga with 170 as against 304 in 2018; Mountain
Province with 143 compared to last year’s 36: Abra, 131 versus the 165 last
year and Baguio City has 101 cases lower than the 138 recorded last year.
Four deaths were
recorded during the period -- two in Benguet, one in Mountain Province and
another involving a patient from non-Cordillera province. In 2018, there were
three deaths -- one each in Baguio and Benguet and one non-resident of
Cordillera.
With a number of primary
hospitals led by the Baguio General Hospital and Medical Center (BGHMC)
operating in the region, several patients from nearby Region 1 seek medical
intervention in the region bringing an additional 384 cases to the region’s
statistics.
Austria also advised the
public to be vigilant, especially this rainy season when water accumulates and
mosquito breeding grounds can develop.
Alexander Baday, an
entomologist of the DOH, earlier urged the public to follow the 4-S to prevent
dengue -- “Search and Destroy, Self-Protection Measures, Seek Early
Consultation and Say No to Indiscriminate Fogging”.
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