Philippine Daily Inquirer

’Cracker injuries worse

DOH: Casualty count higher by 21 percent

- By Niña P. Calleja, Nathaniel R. Melican, Maricar B. Brizuela and InquirerMi­ndanao

HEALTH officials are worried that this year will be “worse” than the past five years as cases of fireworks-related injuries continue to rise before the New Year, even as a growing number of local government­s have banned the use of firecracke­rs in welcoming 2014.

Assistant Health Secretary Enrique Tayag said in radio interviews that the number of injuries as of Monday was higher by 21 percent than the average from 2008 to 2012.

“We are afraid the figures this year will surpass previous records. So we are doing a lastminute campaign. We are

appealing to the public not to light firecracke­rs this New Year’s Eve,” said Tayag, also head of the National Epidemiolo­gy Center.

To help reduce injuries, at least three cities in Mindanao led by Davao City, Zamboanga and Kidapawan have been observing a no-firecracke­rs holiday season.

‘Torotot’

Davao City, which has been implementi­ng the ban the past 11 years, wants to be known as the city of “torotot” (party horns).

In Metro Manila, the cities of Caloocan and Valenzuela have also launched campaigns against using firecracke­rs.

Tayag reported on his Twitter account that the total number of revelry-related injuries had shot up to 244 as of 6 a.m of Dec. 30.

In one day, 46 cases were added to the Department of Health (DOH) list of injuries.

Stray bullets, ‘piccolo’

Of the injuries, one was caused by firecracke­r ingestion while five were due to stray bullets.

“Piccolo,” a banned firecracke­r, remains the major cause of injuries, with 153 cases, or 64 percent of the total number of injuries.

“We are preparing for the worst but we are hopeful that the number of injuries this year will not surpass last year’s levels,” Tayag said.

The number of people using firecracke­rs continues to increase despite the government’s appeal for the public to welcome the New Year through alternativ­e noisemakin­g methods.

Children

The DOH noted that most of those injured (87 percent) were males, while 30 percent were children below 10 years old. Half of the incidents recorded happened in Metro Manila.

In Davao City, Arnold Dellosa, Smart’s regional sales manager for South Mindanao, said the firm was planning to gather 10,000 torotot- blowers in one place this year to break Japan’s 6,900 record of party- horn blowers in the Guinness Book of World Records.

The event at Freedom Park on Roxas Boulevard in the city will start at 1 p.m. on Dec. 31 to 1 a.m. on Jan. 1.

In homes, city residents have become creative making noise or playing music at full volume, banging pans and even shouting at the top of their lungs.

Zamboanga City

In Zamboanga, the city council in November passed a resolution temporaril­y suspending the sale of firecracke­rs and pyrotechni­cs during the Christmas season.

The resolution stemmed from the attempt of Moro National Liberation Front forces to occupy the city, which led to three weeks of fighting with government forces in September and October.

Msgr. Crisologo Manongas, administra­tor of the archdioces­e of Zamboanga, said that instead of buying firecracke­rs, residents could donate money to Supertypho­on “Yolanda” survivors in the Visayas.

For good of everybody

Kidapawan City has also banned firecracke­rs and pyrotechni­cs this year.

“This is for the good of everybody. Itmay take some time before we can really adapt to the firecracke­r ban but we should start now,” Kidapawan Mayor Joseph Evangelist­a said.

The Kidapawan City Fireworks Vendors Associatio­n had appealed to the city government to allow its members to sell “safe firecracke­rs and pyrotechni­cs and that they will sell their wares in city government-identified areas.”

But Evangelist­a, showing political will, politely turned down the request.

“This is to ensure the safety of the public by preventing injuries and even death due to accidents arising from the use of firecracke­rs and pyrotechni­cs,” he said.

In Caloocan City, Mayor Oscar Malapitan led a motorcade on Monday that meandered through the city’s 188 barangays, urging residents to stop using firecracke­rs and firearms to start the New Year.

“We are appealing to all residents to use alternativ­e methods of noisemakin­g. We don’t want them to be injured because firework-related accidents and fires can still happen no matter how careful they are in lighting firecracke­rs,” Malapitan said in a statement.

The motorcade, which started at the northernmo­st barangays of Caloocan bordering Bulacan province, traveled southward and ended in the city proper.

Images of injuries

Along the route, city officials handed out posters showing graphic images of firecracke­r injuries to deter people from using firecracke­rs.

“We also urge gun owners not to discharge their firearms into the air on New Year’s Eve. Please be reminded of the tragedy of 7-year-old resident Stephanie Nicole Ella who was a stray-bullet victim almost a year ago,” he added.

Fire risks

In Valenzuela City, the health office has launched an informatio­n campaign about the dangers of using fireworks while the fire department started a drive to inform people of the fire risks that firecracke­rs pose.

The fire department is also giving safety tips for residents to minimize the risk of fire during New Year’s celebratio­ns.

The health office said there were other materials aside from fireworks that could be used for making noise to usher in the New Year.

“Residents can just blow toy horns or bang tin pots instead of lighting firecracke­rs,” said Kaier Camlian, coordinato­r of the City Health Emergency Services.

Hospitals ready

Camlian said the two city government-operated hospitals— Emergency Hospital and Valenzuela Medical Center—were ready to treat any firecracke­r injuries.

Hospitals in Manila are preparing to treat firecracke­r related injuries during the New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns.

At Ospital ng Maynila, firstaid materials, such as sterile dressing, gauze wraps, syringes and saline solutions were prepared a week before welcoming 2014.

Emergency room head nurse Reynaldo Rico told the INQUIRER that all needed materials had been placed in the trauma section of the emergency room where firecracke­r-related injuries would be treated.

Burn, laceration

Based on the hospital’s record, a total of 11 cases of firecracke­r injuries have been treated in the medical institutio­n since Dec. 25.

The burn, laceration and hematoma cases listed were all caused by the use of piccolo.

Rico noted that most of the

patients were ages 8 to 15.

Asthma attacks

Santa Ana Hospital recorded 12 cases of trauma injuries from firecracke­rs. But the doctor in charge, Rodcar Santos, noted that the hospital tended to have more asthma-attack cases during New Year’s Eve.

“For the past years, we have observed that the number of injuries caused by firecracke­rs had gone down but this has been replaced by patients who complain of breathing problems caused by firecracke­r fumes,” Santos told the INQUIRER.

 ?? NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ?? ‘KWITIS’ (SKYROCKETS) FOR SALE Kwitis, among themost popular pyrotechni­c products that revelers use to greet the New Year, are displayed on Paulate Street in Guinobatan, Albay, awaiting buyers.
NIÑO JESUS ORBETA ‘KWITIS’ (SKYROCKETS) FOR SALE Kwitis, among themost popular pyrotechni­c products that revelers use to greet the New Year, are displayed on Paulate Street in Guinobatan, Albay, awaiting buyers.
 ?? ALEXIS CORPUZ ?? DEADMANWAL­KING On the 117th death anniversar­y of Jose Rizal yesterday, actors reenact his last steps from Fort Santiago, where he was incarcerat­ed, to the Luneta, where he was shot earlymorni­ng of Dec. 30, 1896. INQSnap this page (not just the logo)...
ALEXIS CORPUZ DEADMANWAL­KING On the 117th death anniversar­y of Jose Rizal yesterday, actors reenact his last steps from Fort Santiago, where he was incarcerat­ed, to the Luneta, where he was shot earlymorni­ng of Dec. 30, 1896. INQSnap this page (not just the logo)...
 ?? RICHARD REYES ?? THEY NEVER LEARN Aman grimaces in pain as his hand, which was injured by an exploding firecracke­r, is treated at the Philippine General Hospital in Manila.
RICHARD REYES THEY NEVER LEARN Aman grimaces in pain as his hand, which was injured by an exploding firecracke­r, is treated at the Philippine General Hospital in Manila.
 ?? ALEXIS CORPUZ ?? DANGEROUS NOISEMAKER­S “Super Yolanda,” “Osama bin Laden” and “Napoles,” which are practicall­y improvised explosive devices, are among the jumbo firecracke­rs that the government has banned because they can maim users.
ALEXIS CORPUZ DANGEROUS NOISEMAKER­S “Super Yolanda,” “Osama bin Laden” and “Napoles,” which are practicall­y improvised explosive devices, are among the jumbo firecracke­rs that the government has banned because they can maim users.

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