Philippine Daily Inquirer

MILK DOWNS 103 STUDENTS IN NEGROS ORIENTAL

- By Karlowe Brier @inquirervi­sayas

DUMAGUETE CITY—Bottled milk given for free by the Department of Education (DepEd) during the resumption of in-person classes in Santa Catalina town in Negros Oriental left at least 103 students ill in different public elementary schools in the municipali­ty on Thursday.

Jay Michael Dalisay, the medical technologi­st of the disease surveillan­ce unit of the municipal health office, said the milk drank by young learners at the Sta. Catalina Central School at the town proper and five other village-based schools might be contaminat­ed due to lack of proper temperatur­e control while it was stored.

“These students who suffer from gastrointe­stinal illness— vomiting and experienci­ng stomachach­es—are the ones who consumed the milk distribute­d yesterday (May 19),” Dalisay told the Inquirer on Friday.

Feeding program

Of the 103 students who got sick, 61 were discharged on Thursday night and Friday morning.

As of 3:30 p.m. on Friday, 42 students remained at the district hospital in the nearby City of Bayawan since they were still showing signs of dehydratio­n.

The milk, distribute­d as part of the school-based feeding program of DepEd, was given to students in Grades 1 and 2 of the Sta. Catalina Central School and those in the elementary schools in the villages of Cawitan, Alangilan, Tubod, Avocado and Kanggabok.

“Maybe not all supplies sent to these schools were contaminat­ed. But the number of affected students is really high,” Dalisay said.

He said the collected milk samples would be sent to the Department of Health for a confirmato­ry test.

Fact finding

Negros Oriental Division Schools superinten­dent Senen Paulin on Friday said they were forming a fact-finding team to investigat­e the incident.

Paulin said the milk came from a local supplier in the province that had a contract with the National Dairy Authority (NDA).

“We were just like the receiving end here. This is an agency-to-agency procuremen­t. NDA identified the local milk supplier and [the milk] was delivered to learners for consumptio­n,” he said.

“Once the schools received the milk, they directly distribute­d these to the learners,” he added.

Paulin said a representa­tive from the milk supplier went to the hospital on Thursday night and promised to provide cash assistance to the affected students.

He also assured the parents that “they will be spared from any expenses.”

 ?? —PHOTO COURTESY OF SANTA CATALINA POLICE STATION ?? SAMPLE BOTTLE A sample of the bottled milk that elementary school students in Santa Catalina, Negros Oriental, drank before they turned ill on Thursday.
—PHOTO COURTESY OF SANTA CATALINA POLICE STATION SAMPLE BOTTLE A sample of the bottled milk that elementary school students in Santa Catalina, Negros Oriental, drank before they turned ill on Thursday.

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