Sun.Star Davao

NO MALARIA IN R11

An official of DOH 11 said they have not recorded any malaria cases in Davao Region since July 2017

- BY JULIET C. REVITA / Reporter

The Department of Health 11 (DOH 11) has recorded zero cases of Malaria in Davao Region since July 2017, which can be attributed to the intensifie­d health projects implemente­d in the communitie­s.

In an interview with DOHDavao Regional Dengue Control and Prevention Program Manager engineer Antonietta Ebol yesterday, she said Davao region has been Malaria-free since 2017 but DOH has not yet declared the region as a whole as Malaria-free because there are still some provinces that were not declared as free.

“Zero malaria cases meaning wala ng reported malaria cases in Region 11,” Ebol said.

In Davao Region, Davao Occidental, Compostela Valley, and Davao Oriental have already been declared as Malaria-free while they are still conducting assessment for Davao del Norte and Davao del Sur.

Ebol said the Davao City has not yet been declared as malaria free despite not having any reported malaria cases in the last two years. She said f the city does not have any malaria cases reported in another three years, then that will be the time they will declare it as malaria freel.

In the previous years, malaria disease was found to be prevalent in Marilog and Paquibato districts in Davao City.

She attributed the recorded zero cases with the “developmen­t of new technologi­es, strengthen­ed interventi­ons like use of insecticid­e-treated nets; early diagnosis of malaria suspects; case surveillan­ce and follow up of last cases, and effective treatment.”

Malaria is contracted from a bite of an infective female Anopheles mosquito that breeds in rivers and lakes. It can also be transmitte­d by blood transfusio­n and possibly mother to child before and or during birth.

Its symptoms usually start nine to 14 days after the bite of a mosquito. Infected individual­s may suffer high fever, headache, chills, and shivers, nausea. and vomiting.

In severe form, symptoms may include severe vomiting and diarrhea, generalize­d convulsion, delirium, and impaired consciousn­ess, followed by coma and possibly death.

DOH aims to reduce the incidence of malaria by 90 percent in 2022 towards achieving a malaria-free country by 2030.

Very sorry to disappoint everyone but it looks like today is not the day JAMES JIMENEZ Comelec spokespers­on

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