Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘Goodbye Philippine­s’ kills drunken reveler DOH says New Year’s Eve casualties down

- By Jocelyn R. Uy and Aie Balagtas See

A MAN so intoxicate­d he embraced a very powerful firecracke­r called “Goodbye Philippine­s” as it was about to explode was the lone fatality in the often riotous pyrotechni­cs-powered New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns in the country.

“He sustained a very fatal injury. His jaw was mangled,” Health Secretary Janette Garin said of the victim, tricycle driver Ronald “Aga” Vericio, 45, of Sampaloc, Manila, even as she noted that the overall figures in last

Thursday’s merrymakin­g were something to be happy about.

For the first time in a decade, the number of firecracke­r-related mishaps during the New Year’s Eve festivitie­s plunged to an all-time low, an indication that the government and the police have done something right, according to health officials.

Still and all, when the smoke from the raucous New Year merrymakin­g had cleared yesterday, nine people had lost a hand while 329 sustained injuries that did not need amputation. At least 50 people endured eye trauma from the indiscrimi­nate use of firecracke­rs.

In hospitals across the country, firecracke­r victims rushed into emergency rooms grimacing in pain as they held their bloodied limbs.

‘Lit and hugged’

Vericio died of a heart attack at 1 a.m. yesterday while being transporte­d by ambulance to the Ospital ng Maynila (OsMa) from the Ospital ng Sampaloc.

EENT specialist Dr. Dan Daffon of the OsMa, who was one of the doctors who attended to the victim, said no one could really say how Vericio had “hugged” the firecracke­r that he had lit. But friends who rushed him to the hospital said he was drunk when he did it.

Vericio was one of 34 victims of firecracke­r-related injuries who were treated at the OsMa, according to senior house officer Hanna Sumabong. The figure is higher by nine cases this year, compared to the 24 reported last year.

There was one other death on New Year’s Eve, a 65-year-old woman who died of a heart attack as she watched her house burn in an inferno lit by a firecracke­r in Tondo. ( See story in

Confluence of factors

In a press briefing, Garin reported that as of 6 a.m. yesterday, the Department of Health (DOH) had recorded a total of 384 New Year’s Eve revelry-related accidents since Dec. 21, of which four cases were caused by stray bullets ( See story on this page.)

The figures were 57 percent lower than the five-year average and 53 percent smaller when compared with those of the same period last year.

The DOH also recorded zero case of firecracke­r ingestion, another first in the last 10 years, Garin noted.

“This is one of the best news we heard so far. But our target really is zero casualty so we will step up our campaign toward a total firecracke­r ban this year but we are still willing to support public fireworks display,” said Health Undersecre­tary Vicente Belizario.

Garin said the DOH’s “Iwas Paputok” campaign, with the help of other stakeholde­rs, and the strict enforcemen­t of the law by the Philippine National Police were what significan­tly pulled down the number of injuries, which had been teetering between 860 and 1,300 since 2005.

The drizzle on Thursday night also partly contribute­d to the sudden drop in firecracke­r- related injuries during this year’s revelries, she noted.

“It’s a confluence of these factors. But the strictness of the PNP, not allowing street vendors to sell firecracke­rs and arresting those who peddle prohibited firecracke­rs, was one of the biggest contributi­ng factors,” she said.

Out of the 384 cases, 380 were injured by firecracke­rs; 82 percent involved males and 64 percent children less than 14 years old.

“While we continue to receive reports from various hospitals, we are happy that at least it is 53 percent lower than the previous year and if you will compare in the past five years, the present figure is 57 percent lower,” said Garin.

“But in the coming year, what we really would need to do is to deter the illegal entry of the “piccolo” so that we can bring down further the number of casualties during the New Year festivitie­s,” said Garin.

Deadly piccolo

Records show that the piccolo, a small and cheap firecracke­r that has long been prohibited by authoritie­s, accounted for 58 percent of the New Year merrymakin­g-related injuries, followed by “kwitis,” “luces” and “five star,” another banned pyrotechni­c.

When asked what concrete actions the DOH would want to see from the Bureau of Customs, Garin said the agency must first and foremost find out in what form does the piccolo enter the country.

She also proposed that the bureau begin stringent scrutiny of shipments earlier in the year to thwart attempts to smuggle illegal firecracke­rs, particular­ly the piccolo.

“We really need to know in what form does it come to the Philippine­s. It is being smuggled and it is impossible that it enters the country without the help of some people,” she added.

Health authoritie­s also clarified yesterday that the case of the 9-year-old girl in Bulacan province who was fatally shot shortly before the New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns started was not caused by a stray bullet.

“[The case] has been categorize­d as accidental gunshot wound upon investigat­ion and verificati­on by the PNP,” they said.

The DOH also monitored 83 cases of respirator­y illnesses, mostly asthma and difficulty breathing, following the New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns.

These cases were reported from three hospitals in Metro Manila—the Lung Center of the Philippine­s, East Avenue Medical Center and Jose Reyes Memorial Medical Center, said Garin.

To ensure that the number of casualties from firecracke­r use would not rise in the coming days, Garin advised parents and guardians to prevent their children from picking up or playing with leftover firecracke­rs found on the streets.

“Because it rained on New Year’s Eve, there is a possibilit­y that some of these leftover firecracke­rs did not blow up, posing a risk to anyone who might pick them up later,” she said.

Adults should gather leftover firecracke­rs in a drum filled with water and turn them over to the PNP for proper disposal, she said.

Dramatic drop

The PNP in Quezon province also reported a dramatic drop in the number of individual­s injured by firecracke­rs during the New Year’s Eve revelries.

As of noon yesterday, 15 people, the youngest being a 3-year-old boy, were recorded to have sustained injuries from firecracke­r blasts in Quezon , mostly from the piccolo, the PNP-Quezon report said.

The number was way below the 53 victims of firecracke­r-related injuries during the New Year celebratio­ns last year, said Senior Supt. Ronaldo Genaro Ylagan, Quezon PNP chief.

Ylagan attributed the drop in the number of firecracke­r-relat- ed injuries to the police public safety campaign that the authoritie­s conducted on mainstream and social media platforms like Facebook.

In Mimaropa (Mindoro, Marinduque, Romblon, Palawan), the PNP said it recorded only four firecracke­r injuries—three in the Mindoro provinces and one in Romblon.

In Bicol, however, the DOH regional office recorded 79 firecracke­r injuries during the period fromDec. 21 last year to Jan. 1 this year, a 13-percent increase from the 69 cases reported last year.

Failure in Bicol

Meanwhile, firecracke­r injuries in Bicol surged 46 percent, or from 13 cases last year to 28 this year, said Dr. Evi Sarmiento, DOH Bicol Action Paputok Injury Reduction program coordinato­r.

Sarmiento said 62 percent of the victims were minors, again with the outlawed piccolo as the leading cause of injury.

She said the DOH’s campaign for a zero casualty apparently failed in Bicol because law enforcemen­t agencies did not strictly enforce the ban on firecracke­rs specially the sale of the product to minors.

One of the victims, a 36-yearold man from Camarines Norte province, seriously injured one of his hands that it had to be amputated, Sarmiento said.

In Cebu City, Joname Diaz, 23, was standing outside a store on C. Padilla Street at 11 p.m. on New Year’s Eve buying load for her cell phone when she suddenly fell to the ground.

Diaz was hit by a stray bullet in her buttocks. Her relatives have no idea who fired the shot.

Diaz was one of four victims of stray bullets in Central Visayas recorded by the DOH regional office from Dec. 21, 2015, to Jan. 1. The two other victims were from a different barangay in Cebu City and the third was in Baclayon in Bohol province.

At least 99 firecracke­r-related injuries were reported in Western and Central Visayas.

In Western Visayas, 41 cases of injuries from firecracke­rs were reported in the provinces of Iloilo, Aklan, Antique, Guimaras and Capiz. The number was less than the 57 reported in 2014.

Central Visayas reported 58 firecracke­r-related injuries, against the 54 reported last year, said the DOH-7’s Renan Cimafranca.

The youngest victim was a 1-month-old baby and the oldest was 76 years old.

There were no reported fatalities from firecracke­r use this year, he added.

In Cotabato City, a 50-year-old man from Barangay Marquez was injured in the leg after being hit by a stray bullet at the height of the New Year’s Eve revelry. It was the first case of stray bullet injury in Central Mindanao.

Jenny Ventura, of the DOH in Central Mindanao, reported that a total of 63 persons were injured by firecracke­rs in the provinces of North and South Cotabato, Sarangani and Sultan Kudarat from Dec. 21 to 6 a.m. of Jan. 1, 2016.

South Cotabato had the highest number of injuries so far, with 23 cases reported.

Zero injuries

No firecracke­r-related injuries was reported in Davao City and two provinces in Southern Mindanao.

But police in Davao City arrested three persons, including a teenage girl, for violating the firecracke­r ban after being found with several packs of prohibited firecracke­rs.

Police in Compostela Valley said that as of 9 a.m. on Friday, they had yet to receive any report of injuries related to New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns.

There was also zero firecracke­r-related incidents and injuries in Davao Oriental province, said Senior Supt. Joseph Sepulcre, Davao Oriental police chief.

In Davao del Norte province, Senior Supt. Samuel Gadingan, the provincial police chief, confirmed there were cases of firecracke­r-related injuries in the province, but could not immediatel­y provide details.

 ?? RICHARD A. REYES ?? NEWYEAR BABY Kashmyr Mancilla smiles as she sleeps on the chest of her mother Mary Ann at the Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Manila. The baby was born at 12:01 a.m. on Jan. 1.
RICHARD A. REYES NEWYEAR BABY Kashmyr Mancilla smiles as she sleeps on the chest of her mother Mary Ann at the Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital in Manila. The baby was born at 12:01 a.m. on Jan. 1.
 ??  ?? THE MORNING AFTER Smog covers the streets of Metro Manila following New Year’s Eve festivitie­s.
THE MORNING AFTER Smog covers the streets of Metro Manila following New Year’s Eve festivitie­s.
 ?? MARIANNE BERMUDEZ ?? NEW YEAR WISHES Revelers gather at the Eastwood Open Park in Libis, Quezon City, where they release thousands of balloons carrying their wishes for the New Year.
MARIANNE BERMUDEZ NEW YEAR WISHES Revelers gather at the Eastwood Open Park in Libis, Quezon City, where they release thousands of balloons carrying their wishes for the New Year.
 ?? JILSON SECKLER TIU/RICHARD A. REYES ?? SAFE ANDSORRY At left, a young boy cries after sustaining injury from a “piccolo” during the New Year’s Eve festivitie­s in Manila. At right, a young girl blows her horn as revelers welcome the year of 2016 during countdown at Rajah Sulayman Park in...
JILSON SECKLER TIU/RICHARD A. REYES SAFE ANDSORRY At left, a young boy cries after sustaining injury from a “piccolo” during the New Year’s Eve festivitie­s in Manila. At right, a young girl blows her horn as revelers welcome the year of 2016 during countdown at Rajah Sulayman Park in...
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