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Public Health / Sanitation

More cases in urban areas

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The Hindu             19.07.2012

More cases in urban areas

Staff Reporter

There has been no malaria death recorded this year in Mangalore urban and rural areas, according to the Dakshina Kannada District Malaria Status Report 2011-12.

In June 2012, there were 5,564 smears of which 677 cases had malaria (of which, 52 were serious) in Mangalore. In rural areas, there were 8,660 smears and 24 cases of malaria (none serious) were found. A total of 14,224 smears and 701 malaria cases were recorded in the same month. According to Jayaram Poojary, Senior Malaria Inspector, District Vector Borne Disease Control Office, blood smear tests for malaria are done at the following places: Government Wenlock Hospital, District Disease Surveillance Office (near Central Railway Station), Bondel Primary Health Centre (PHC), inside Mangalore City Corporation, Surathkal (PHC), Katipalla (PHC), Kudupu (PHC), Urban Health Centres in Lady Hill, Mullakadu, and Bengre.

Tests are also done at Mulky Community Health Centre and Moodbidri Community Health Centre. Private hospitals also provide tests for malaria.

 

Step up cleanliness drive, civic bodies told

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The Hindu         13.07.2012

Step up cleanliness drive, civic bodies told

Staff Reporter

Uncleared garbage mounting in Thrissur

Additional District Magistrate P.K. Jayasree has asked the corporation and municipal authorities to intensify the ward-level sanitation activities.

The ADM asked the civic bodies to submit an action taken report on the sanitation drive by July 30. The government has allotted Rs.10,000 for each ward. She urged the heath department to work in tandem with the health wing of the civic bodies.

Meanwhile, the garbage issue in the city continued to be severe. The entire city has become a huge garbage dumping yard.

There is no road in the city where one can walk without suffering the stench of the rotting garbage.

The garbage, including domestic waste, plastic and rotting carcasses, lies heaped on every street corner as garbage removal from the city had stopped many months ago. Stray dogs and cattle feasting on heaps of garbage is a common sight even in posh localities.

Epidemic threat

“We have not opened the windows towards the road for months as people are dumping garbage in front of our flat. No action has been taken against it even after repeated complaints to the authorities,” says K.S. Manjula, who stays near Poonkunnam.

People were trying all measures, including burning and disinfecting, when the nauseating stench from the rotten garbage became unbearable, she noted.

A constant threat of an epidemic outbreak looms large over Thrissur city due to appalling sanitary conditions. People are apprehensive over the increasing number of diseases. In all, 1,554 persons sought treatment for fever in the district on Wednesday alone, of whom 51 were admitted to various hospitals.

Meanwhile, increasing number of malaria cases among migrant labourers is worrying health officials.

In all, 103 cases of malaria have been reported in this year in the district. The migrant labourers, most of them from Orissa, Bihar and West Bengal, live in poor living conditions with appalling sanitary facilities.

Inadequate shelter, lack of basic amenities and limited access to health care make them susceptible to vector-borne diseases including malaria, dengue, chikungunya and filariasis, the health officials said.


  • Threat of epidemic outbreak looming large over Thrissur
  • Increasing malaria cases among migrant labourers worrying officials
 

Waste collection: buckets to be distributed in Alappuzha

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The Hindu          06.06.2012

Waste collection: buckets to be distributed in Alappuzha

Staff Reporter

A meeting of the Municipality council here decided to launch projects to collect segregated waste from households under its jurisdiction.

The meeting held here on Tuesday to find an urgent solution to the vexing waste problem decided to distribute buckets to families in 10 wards in the municipality to segregate bio-degradable and plastic wastes as part of processing these wastes. A total of Rs 32 lakh will be earmarked for distributing buckets from the waste processing fund of the municipality. Many who spoke at the meeting pointed out that the problem with waste processing in the town was the mixing of bio-degradable waste and plastic waste. The distribution of separate buckets for these wastes is expected to solve this problem of mixing of wastes.

An all-party team of councillors will be sent to study the waste processing plant of Kottayam municipality. The team will also visit Thiruvananthapuram to seek help from Chief Minister Ooomen Chandy and other Ministers.

The meeting also decided to further strengthen the existing ban on plastic in the municipal area. Demands were raised at the meeting that punitive action should be taken against those who work against the plastic ban. Bio-gas plants will be set up in hotels in the town. The meeting also decided to cancel the licenses of those hotels which do not set up the plant.

Councillors, Prem, Ramesh, Althaf and V.G.Vishnu of the LDF and Illikkal Kunjumon, A.A.Rasaq, Sunil George, O.K.Shafeeq, Raju Thanickal, M.M.Sherif, Basheer Koyaparambil from the UDF were among those who spoke at the meeting.

A total of Rs 32 lakh will be earmarked for distributing buckets.

 


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