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Public Health / Sanitation

50,000 street dogs to get anti-rabies shots across India

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The Times of India              02.09.2013

50,000 street dogs to get anti-rabies shots across India

CHENNAI: More than 50,000 street dogs across the country will be vaccinated against rabies over the next 30 days.

Various animal rights organisations have come together for 'Mission Rabies', the mass vaccination drive. Chennai will be one of the focal points of the programme. At least two deaths due to rabies were reported in the city this year and as many as 11 in 2012.

According to Corporation of Chennai officials and animal rights activists, mass vaccination of dogs is cheapest way to control rabies.

Teams will cover neighbourhoods in veterinary hospital vehicles and vaccinate all stray dogs. They will also provide surgical training to corporation staff and animal welfare NGOs for animal birth control to tackle street dog overpopulation. Chennai is estimated to have around three lakh street dogs.

Under the project, the organisations will also set up an 'India National Rabies Network' through which they will supply subsidised, effective vaccines nationwide (online at www.missionrabies.in) and map vaccination coverage across the country.

"The vaccination of 50,000 dogs will be carried out in 12 of India's worst affected areas including Chennai," a Blue Cross of India official said. Activists involved in the programme said they hope to vaccinate two million dogs in the country in three years.

The initiative was conceived specifically for India, which accounts for one-third of all rabies cases reported worldwide. "Children from poor and marginal communities are the worst affected," the official said.

Blue Cross has joined Mission Rabies, which is likely to begin on Monday. Dogs Trust of the UK will be the main international sponsor. The programme will focus on street dogs in the extended areas of the corporation. "We will concentrate on outskirts, places like Tambaram and Guduvanchery," he said. Officials say most rabies deaths are reported from outside the corporation limits. However, a few cases reported last year involved patients from Ambattur and Porur in the city.

 

Public toilets get cleaner as civic body takes action

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The Hindu              02.09.2013

Public toilets get cleaner as civic body takes action

In good condition:Hygiene standards have improved in public convenience facilities in the city, as a result of Coimbatore Corporation's new initiative.– PHOTO: S.SIVA SARAVANAN
In good condition:Hygiene standards have improved in public convenience facilities in the city, as a result of Coimbatore Corporation's new initiative.– PHOTO: S.SIVA SARAVANAN

Odour-filled, dirty public toilets maintained by the Coimbatore Corporation are a thing of the past. The public convenience facilities are not just clean, they also have adequate water supply, doors in good condition and proper lighting.

The changeover has come about after the civic body initiated steps to improve the monitoring mechanism. Corporation Commissioner G. Latha said that her surprise visits to public convenience facilities revealed that there was no proper monitoring mechanism, which helped the contractors get away easily without fulfilling their obligations.

Now the Corporation’s sanitary supervisors visit almost 95 per cent of the 268 toilets to ensure that they are clean, have enough water, have the lights in working condition, etc. And the supervisors do it twice a day — morning and evening.

The change is visible on the ground. Kanniamma, who stays in Ondipudur, said that the contractor supplied acid, bleaching powder, etc in time and ensured that they cleaned the toilet complex. The contractor also ensured their complaints regarding doors, motors that pump water, etc were addressed at the earliest. Hygiene at the toilet had visibly improved in that people no longer hesitated using them, said Lakshmi Lakshmanan, a Singanallur resident.

Commissioner Ms. Latha said that sanitary supervisors would visit every day the public toilets they were assigned to supervise and send reports over a specially designed mobile application. The Corporation would receive the same and senior officials would monitor the developments on a day-to-day basis. At places where the supervisors reported problems, the Commissioner and the contractor concerned would get the report for follow-up action. After carrying out the corrections, the contractors concerned would report to the Corporation, which would verify the claims based on the supervisor’s report. The Corporation would identify contractors against whom the Corporation received negative reports and hold over their payment. Ms. Latha said that the Corporation had so far not delayed payments to contractors as the new system had been in place for only a month now.

 

Now, one malaria worker for every 500 houses in Chennai city

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The Hindu              31.08.2013

Now, one malaria worker for every 500 houses in Chennai city

Staff Reporter

A rise in mosquito density in a number of neighbourhoods has forced the Chennai Corporation to allocate one malaria worker for every 500 households in the city.

Following a meeting on Tuesday, each of the malaria workers has been provided with a list of addresses for targeted mosquito control operations.

“The malaria workers will shoulder responsibility of mosquito control in each of the houses. If a resident complains about mosquitoes in any of the houses, the malaria worker concerned will be responsible. The worker will have to screen all 500 households in a week,” said an official.

These instructions have been given in the wake of a rise in malaria cases in some zones. Royapuram, with 150 malaria cases and Teynampet with 140 cases in the past 50 days, have become a cause for concern. George Town, Korrukupet and Mylapore have also reported several cases.

Though other areas had fewer cases, calls to the helpline 1913 about mosquitoes in these zones, has remained high.

As many as 3,000 malaria workers will have lists of door numbers of 15 lakh households in the city. The Corporation has also asked residents’ associations to talk to the workers concerned to make use of the new system. The workers will remove mosquito breeding sources in any household that reports high mosquito density.

The Corporation will use the services of another 200 malaria workers to prevent breeding of mosquitoes in stormwater drains, canals or other water bodies.

 


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