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Public Health / Sanitation

Corporation drive to promote hygienic practices in slums

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The Hindu 17.09.2009

Corporation drive to promote hygienic practices in slums

 

Special Correspondent

Photo: K. Ananthan

FOR BETTER HEALTH: Corporation health workers on a door-to-door campaign to encourage use of public toilets at Kamarajapuram in the city on Tuesday. —

COIMBATORE: The Coimbatore Corporation has launched a drive to promote hygienic practices in the slums in the city.

The main focus is on eliminating open defecation and promoting the use of public toilets constructed in these areas for the below poverty line families.

Led by Assistant City Health Officer R. Sumathi, health officials and urban health nurses went on a sensitisation drive in the slums at Kamarajapuram on Tuesday. The drive would continue in this area and would be carried out in other slums also.

Dr. Sumathi said Corporation Commissioner Anshul Mishra ordered the drive after seeing the conditions at the Kamarajapuram slum.

The Commissioner wanted to know why open defecation continued despite provision of a public toilet and a pay-and-use toilet in the locality.

Seeing a health hazard, he wanted the health wing to educate them on dangers such as hookworms that caused anaemia.

The health team took a slide projector to the slum to show how human excreta mixed in rain water and hookworms in it entered through the skin of the soles when people walked barefooted in such areas.

The hookworms first get into the lungs. From there they come out through sputum while coughing. Young children who did not how to spit this out, swallowed it, the health official said.

“This is the way how the hookworm gets into the small intestine and draws blood from it. It injects an anti-coagulant to prevent the blood from clotting. While the hookworms suck in only that much amount of blood they need, the rest passes through stools. This causes anaemia in people, especially children, Dr. Sumathi explained. No amount of iron tablets would be enough to treat anaemia in these cases.

Therefore, the Corporation provided de-worming tablets to children in the slums and tried to educate them and their parents on hygienic practices such as using toilets.

Last Updated on Wednesday, 16 September 2009 23:52
 

Online facility for disease-tracking to come up in Chennai

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The Hindu 14.09.2009

Online facility for disease-tracking to come up in Chennai

 

Shastry V. Mallady

MADURAI: A hi-tech network for Online Disease Surveillance and Prediction, particularly of chikungunya, by using Geographical Information System (GIS) facilities will soon be established in Chennai under the auspices of the Tamil Nadu State Council for Science and Technology. Besides tracking the vector-borne chikungunya and dengue across the State, the council has decided to scientifically track the A(H1N1) flu.

An Emergency Response Management Mechanism will be created at the council’s office in Chennai, in collaboration with the Tamil Nadu Health Department, by deploying technological tools that will help in creating a huge database, according to S. Vincent, member secretary, Tamil Nadu State Council for Science and Technology.

“Our council had decided to concentrate on disease surveillance so that a better understanding of diseases and prevention aspects in time will become possible in Tamil Nadu,” he told The Hindu on Sunday. He said a well-equipped facility for online tracking of chikungunya, dengue and suspected swine flu cases will be set up shortly.

Last Updated on Monday, 14 September 2009 01:05
 

Govt launches swine flu website

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The New Indian Express 11.09.2009

Govt launches swine flu website



 

CHENNAI: A website devoted to information on swine flu was launched by the State government on Thursday. Tamil Nadu is the first state in India to launch such a website. The website can be accessed at www.swineflutninfo.in and has information on epidemology, mode of transmission, case management and self care practices for prevention, in Tamil and English.

It also gives information on a list of laboratories, helplines, a disease meter and a page on frequently asked questions. State health minister M R K Panneerselvam said, “ The government has taken several measures to effectively control the spread of flu in the state.”

Pvt lab gets nod

In a related development, the Tamil Nadu Government on Friday approved Lister Metropolis to conduct H1N1 screenings. Lister Metropolis had successfully cleared all safety norms specified by the State government.

Metropolis Labs in Mumbai and Pune have also applied for conducting H1N1 and are waiting for government approval, a press release stated.

Last Updated on Friday, 11 September 2009 12:41
 


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