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Stay on alert for dengue, doctors warn

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Stay on alert for dengue, doctors warn

By The Nation

 

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file photo

 

Residents of Thailand – and especially those in Bangkok, neighbouring provinces and large southern cities – must stay alert to the danger of dengue fever and other mosquito-borne diseases even beyond the rainy season, the Department of Disease Control (DDC) warned on Thursday.

 

Rainfall has persisted this cool season and the Aedes aegypti mosquito has plenty of places to breed, said DDC director-general Dr Suwannachai Wattanayingcharoenchai.

 

He said 1,279 people were treated for dengue in Bangkok and vicinity, Phuket, Nakhon Si Thammarat, Songkhla and Krabi between January 1 and 29.

 

The figure was lower than in the same period last year and no one has died thus far in 2018, whereas the disease killed three people last year, he said.

 

Suwannachai said, however, that a Surveillance and Rapid Response Team from the DDC 11th Office in Nakhon Si Thammarat is consulting health officials in Surat Thani about a “rumour” that a child had died of dengue fever last month in the South. The results of lab tests are awaited, he said.

 

Suwannachai urged people to keep their homes clean and uncluttered, eliminate dark corners, dispose of trash regularly and store water only in covered containers.

 

These steps are essential to prevent the Aedes aegypti mosquito from laying eggs and spreading dengue fever, the Zika virus and Chikungunya fever.

 

DDC Bureau of Vector-borne Diseases director Dr Preecha Prempree advised anyone with persistent high fever and unusual muscle and joint pain and skin rashes to see a doctor.

 

Urgent medical treatment is essential if there is a sudden drop in blood pressure, bleeding from the gums or nose, or blood in the urine, stools or vomit.

 

Information and help is available on the DDC hotline, 1422.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/national/30338287

 
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-- © Copyright The Nation 2018-02-08

" Suwannachai urged people to keep their homes clean and uncluttered, eliminate dark corners, dispose of trash regularly and store water only in covered containers."

Any advice for the government to take some measures? Skeeters can fly, and plenty of places for them to breed in puddles etc of streets, empty lots, public areas.

 I've had dengue twice. It's no picnic

I've had a bit of fever and mild joint pain for three days-it seems like the flu to me.

4 hours ago, Emster23 said:

" Suwannachai urged people to keep their homes clean and uncluttered, eliminate dark corners, dispose of trash regularly and store water only in covered containers."

Any advice for the government to take some measures? Skeeters can fly, and plenty of places for them to breed in puddles etc of streets, empty lots, public areas.

 I've had dengue twice. It's no picnic

Once again:   Get expert advice from Singapore.  They have 'Mosquito Police', and if your property is found to have old tyres or other means of holding water, such as pot plant saucers, you get fined.

 

NOT 500baht and a slap on the wrist, but $SIN1000.00.   This applies to high rise buildings as well as those at ground level.

i have had dengue and been hospitalized 5 nights for it;

it is very nasty stuff, you go thru patches where you do really want to die;

recommendation, tiny bit of research to identify the 'tiger mosquito' , along the way understanding this breed (actually 4 sub-breeds) can/will bite all day long , not just 'mosquito hours'

They've been saying this for years. Unfortunately with lack of education, ignorance and laziness nothing will change. Thais are Thais. 

 

Best piece of news. 

3 hours ago, YetAnother said:

i have had dengue and been hospitalized 5 nights for it;

it is very nasty stuff, you go thru patches where you do really want to die;

recommendation, tiny bit of research to identify the 'tiger mosquito' , along the way understanding this breed (actually 4 sub-breeds) can/will bite all day long , not just 'mosquito hours'

Aedes aegypti.

aedes-aegypti-300x219.jpg.jpga.jpg

I've had one time and spent 6 days in a hospital here in Thailand. It was not my best period of my life. Totally agreeing with the above comments, but understanding the difficulties too. For this predators, the smallest water is enough to survive and it is simply impossible to close every possibility for them. In a town like Singapore, it is not as difficult as in a village, especially where rice and chicken farming is the main occupation. Local authorizations do some spraying but it is usually way much stinkier as their effect on the mosquito population.
Otherwise, as one who lived in Singapore before, I got dengue there. Well, not in these days ....

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