Xinhua News Agency
MANILA — The Philippines’ Department of Health (DOH) on Tuesday, Aug. 2, said it has tallied 319 deaths from dengue fever this year as cases continue to rise during the wet season.
Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire told a press conference that the DOH has recorded 82,597 cases as of July 16, 106 percent higher than the cases recorded in the same period last year.
DOH data showed the Central Luzon region recorded the highest cases with over 13,000, followed by the Central Visayas region with nearly 9,000, and Metro Manila with almost 7,000.
Vergeire added that 10 of the Southeast Asian country’s regions “have already exceeded the epidemic threshold in the past four weeks from June 19 to July 16 with three areas showing a sustained increase in the same period.
Dengue is endemic in the Philippines. The water-borne infectious diseases, including dengue, usually peak at the start of the rainy season from July to October due to fluctuating weather conditions, flooding, and accumulation of contaminated water.
Dengue mosquitoes breed in stagnant water like water-filled containers and some plants including bananas.
In severe cases, dengue can cause joint pain, nausea, vomiting, rashes, breathing problems, hemorrhaging and organ failure.
The Philippines declared a “national dengue epidemic” in August 2019 due to an increasing number of people who died from the disease in the Southeast Asian country. – gb