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Health Director Talks On
Strategies To Destroy Aedes Mosquitos
Bandar Seri
Begawan – Vector surveillance, case surveillance, health
education and promotion are the strategies to control and destroy
aedes mosquito breeding.
Dr Zainol Ariffin bin Pawanchee,
Director of Health in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, highlighted this at a
session on diseases carried by mosquitoes at the health seminar
yesterday.
The vector surveillance is to
identify dengue sensitive areas, using mosquito larva trapping devices
to decrease mosquito population in residential areas, create special
anti-dengue epidemic control team in out-break areas and mobilise
members of the community for aedes control.
Meanwhile, case surveillance is to
determine occurrence of cases according to grid areas and to determine
place of transmission such as residential, school, work place and
others. Health promotion, on the other hand, is to determine the
target groups and information for dissemination.
At the same session, Dr Siti Romlah
binti Haji Mohammad Jais, Veterinarian Officer at the Agriculture
Department, stressed on the danger of pets and livestock to human
health.
She said the factors in preventing
all such hazards are cleanliness for the animals and visits to the
veterinarian at least once a month for health checkups.
At the session, it was also revealed
that houses nowadays cannot guarantee 100 per cent safety to
occupants.
Many types of accidents can happen at
any time. For example, fire hazards caused by carelessness that can
result in loss of properties and a place to stay, injuries and even
death.
This was disclosed by Awang Osman
Jailani, the Public Relations Officer of the fire services department,
in his working paper entitled "Hazards in domestic setting".
He said every house should have a
systematic plan to prevent fire and save lives during a fire.
Meanwhile, Dr. Pengiran Haji Khalifah,
Acting Senior Medical Officer of the Health Work Practice Section,
Ministry of Health, in his talk on "Workplace, health and safety",
revealed that according to the 2003 Annual Report from the
Occupational Health Division, 139 cases of accidents at work were
reported during the period from June to December of last year.
He said the workplace should
implement hazard controls. --
Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin
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