Friday, March 16, 2018

230 students in Klang were down with the fever in the first two months of the year

  Ano Nyme       Friday, March 16, 2018



News from TheStar Online.

KLANG schools are on alert for dengue cases after 230 students were down with the fever in the first two months of the year. The students, aged between 10 and 19, are believed to have contracted dengue from one main Aedes mosquito breeding ground – the toilets at school.

Klang Municipal Council (MPK) Health Department director Azmi Muji said Aedes mosquito larvae was found in toilet cisterns and places with stagnant water. “Cisterns with broken or missing lids with little water were found with Aedes larvae at certain schools.

We are worried the cases involving children and teenagers.

“Clearing up the vector breeding sites is the mainstay for dengue fever control. Our health officers gave out abate sachets to schools for effective elimination of vector breeding sites,” he said.

Azmi confirmed that there have been 1,047 dengue fever cases recorded from Jan 1 to Feb 28.

“Our health officers are visiting two schools a week and in a month at least 10 schools are checked,” he said.

He added that MPK was worried with the coming school holidays from March 17 to 25 as water will remain stagnant in the cisterns.

“Students and teachers will be on leave and toilets will not be flushed. Water in toilet bowls, cisterns and pails will become breeding spots for mosquitoes. “We will send out a circular to all headmasters to clean up their school compounds before school reopens on March 26,” he said.

Azmi also informed schools that do not have abate to substitute it with rough salt.

Klang MCA Public Complaints and Services bureau deputy chief Datuk Tan Bok Koon urged MPK to increase insecticide fumigation and send officers to inspect locations where mosquitoes might breed during the school holidays.

Last month MPK visited SM Klang Utama, SM Methodist ACS, SM Methodist Girls, SM Bandar Sultan Sulaiman and SM Telok Gadong, and briefed about 300 students on the dengue scourge.

“We want them to use repellents as a safeguard against dengue,” he said.

MPK corporate communications director Norfiza Mahfiz said the people’s initiative, known as the Community Free of Aedes, 10-Minutes (KOBA-10) where people were encouraged to spend 10 minutes a week to clean up their surroundings was much needed.

“KOBA-10 is a community-based approach to identify ways to reduce dengue cases in residential areas. It is crucial to have community support to stop the chain of dengue transmission,” she said, adding that fighting dengue could not be done by MPK alone.

“The World Health Organisation has endorsed the source reduction approach, which encompasses preventive methods, public education and community involvement,” she said.

She said concerted efforts could reduce the number of breeding grounds. Classic symptoms of dengue fever are high fever, headache, body ache (both muscle and bone), weakness, vomiting, sore throat, altered taste sensation and a centrifugal maculopapular rash.

Read more at The Star Online

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Terima Kasih kerana membaca, 230 students in Klang were down with the fever in the first two months of the year

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