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Corporations gear up for dengue with mosquito nets

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The Hindu      18.07.2016    

Corporations gear up for dengue with mosquito nets

From mosquito nets for patients to additional beds in hospitals, the Capital’s municipal corporations are getting ready to face the onslaught of dengue cases in the coming months. With monsoon being active this past week, the expected increase in cases of the vector-borne viral disease has made the municipalities ramp up preparations.

Though only 39 cases of dengue have so far been reported in the city, the number is set to rise in the next three months as the weather gets cooler. Last year, Delhi had seen a record-high 15,867 cases of dengue, up from 995 in 2014.

The North Delhi Municipal Corporation, which operates two large hospitals, will be using insecticidal mosquito nets for patients suffering from dengue. All the three corporations are in the process of distributing these nets, which have been made with a chemical-laced fibre that repels mosquitoes, to vulnerable communities. In North Delhi, Mayor Dr. Sanjeev Nayyar has directed the hospitals to give these nets to patients as well.

“Hospitals are zero-tolerance zones, so we cannot allow the disease to spread from a patient. The patients will be kept under their mosquito nets till they are being treated as the virus stays in the blood for up to one week,” said Dr. D.K. Seth, the Director of Hospital Administration of North Corporation.

The North Corporation’s Bara Hindu Rao Hospital and Kasturba Hospital will both stock these nets. In addition, the civic body has stocked 15 lakh paracetamol tablets, IV fluids, the blood bank has been augmented and 438 additional beds prepared.

The East Delhi Municipal Corporation will also be handing out mosquito nets to patients, spokesperson Y.S. Mann said. He added that the civic body had distributed these nets to residents who are at risk of contracting the disease.

While the South Delhi Municipal Corporation does not have any major hospitals, it has ramped up inspections to curb mosquito breeding, apart from distributing the mosquito nets.

 

Warangal will become world class city by 2019: Mayor

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The Hindu       18.07.2016 

Warangal will become world class city by 2019: Mayor

He inspects traffic junctions in Warangal, Hanamkonda and Kazipet along with Joint Collector Prashanth J. Patil

Mayor N. Narender went around traffic junctions in Warangal, Hanamkonda and Kazipet towns along with Joint Collector Prashanth J. Patil, KUDA Planning Officer E. Ajith Reddy, Corporation Superintendent Engineer Abdul Rahman and City Planner A.K. Reddy and said that Warangal would become a world class city by 2019.

He held discussions with the officials on beautification of junctions at Kaloji, Fatima and Adalath centres, Collectors’ camp office, Waddepally, Kadipikonda and Madikonda.

They would be equipped with improved street-lighting, fountains and traffic islands, he said, adding that efforts were on to usher in massive development.

The Mayor informed that Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao has given Warangal a budgetary allocation of Rs. 300 crore for its development on par with the State capital.

A total of Rs. 44 crore was already released.

Steps were being taken to construct underground drainage, establish a lounge at Hanamkonda chowrastha where a large parking space for two wheelers would be provided.

Deputy Mayor Khaja Sirajuddin and Mr. Narender held a meeting with bankers and appealed to them to make liberal donations to the Green Fund under their CSR activity for effective implementation of Haritha Haram programme.

He also wanted contributions from owners of industries, rice mills, function halls and others for the fund.

 

Is there a link between water supply & dengue?

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The Hindu       18.07.2016 

Is there a link between water supply & dengue?

Is there a co-relationship between irregular water supply and outbreak of dengue? The District Health Office thinks so and has urged the Mysuru City Corporation (MCC) to ensure regular water supply to certain localities to remove the need to store it as it could lead to breeding of mosquitoes and outbreak of dengue.

Senior officials in the Health Department told The Hindu that one of the factors for the rise in dengue cases in the city could be attributed to the storage of water in large but open containers due to irregular supply.

“Citizens are forced to store water in plastic vessels, cement tubs and in various other containers and these containers have become a breeding place for mosquitoes,” said the officials.

Department officials, who went around the city educating people about the dos and don’ts and the imperatives of reducing water storage, were told of the practical difficulties faced by them as water supply is irregular.

“People ask us to supply drinking water every day if they have to stop storing the water in containers such as plastic vessels and cement tubs,” the official added.

S. Chidambara, District Vector Borne diseases control officer, told The Hindu that the practice of storing water was widely prevalent in Hebbal, Shanthinagar, Kalyanagiri, Udayagiri, Ghousia Nagar etc. which, incidentally, are also the places which are susceptible to the outbreak of dengue.

Meanwhile, the Health department had written to the MCC to supply water particularly to these areas on alternative days at least till September as the chances of outbreak of epidemiology diseases would be high during the interim period.

The Health Department said that it would be difficult to prevent the spread of the disease until regular water supply is ensured.

 


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