TACLOBAN
CITY, Oct. 11 (PNA) – Southern Leyte’s capital, Maasin City has declared the
reported Chikungunya outbreak here with 548 suspected cases as manageable, the
city health official reported on Tuesday.
City health
officer Francilisa Tan said the reported rise of mosquito-borne disease was
only based on house-to-house survey done by nurses of the provincial health
office in Ibarra, Maria Clara, and Pasay villages.
“We have not
officially declared an outbreak since the nurses conducted the interview weeks
or a month after the patients manifested the symptoms. All cases are suspected
since we have no means to confirm that in our level. There’s possibility that
those cases are not Chikungunya,” said Tan in a mobile phone interview.
The youngest
victim is a nine-month old infant while the eldest is 85 years old, according
to the city health office report.
Local health
surveillance officers sent urine samples to Manila of two pregnant women
suffering the viral disease to find out if they are positive of Zika virus.
Citing a
separate report, Tan said that 122 suspected Chikungunya patients had sought
consultation at the city health office in the last three months from the three
affected villages.
The city
health official believed that suspected cases have spread in these three areas
considering their proximity to Ichon village in nearby Macrohon town, where
cases were noted early of July.
Chikungunya
is characterized by an abrupt onset of fever frequently accompanied by joint
pain. Other common signs and symptoms include muscle pain, headache, nausea,
fatigue and rash.
The virus is
transmitted from human to human by the bites of infected female mosquitoes that
transmits dengue and Zika. Chikungunya, however, is not as deadly as other
mosquito-borne diseases.
The local
government has launched a massive information drive aimed at reducing the
number of natural and artificial water-filled container habitats that support
breeding of mosquitoes.(PNA)
FPV/SARWELL Q. MENIANO
FPV/SARWELL Q. MENIANO
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