Health execs say 5 fatalities didn’t get Dengvaxia shots; cases up by 64 percent
06:10 AM March 16, 2018
The Cavite provincial health office has declared an outbreak of
dengue in seven towns and two cities following an increase in the number
of cases of the mosquito-borne disease during the first quarter of this
year.
Dr. Nelson Soriano, provincial epidemiologist, said health workers
recorded 1,499 dengue cases between Jan. 1 and March 11, representing an
increase of 64 percent from the 914 cases recorded during the same
period last year.
This number, he said, exceeded what medical experts called “alert
threshold,” computed against the population and based on the lowest
number of dengue occurrence recorded over nine years, prompting health
officials to declare an outbreak.
Deaths
An outbreak was declared in the towns of Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo,
Indang, Mendez, Naic, Noveleta, Rosario and Tanza, and the cities of
Cavite and Trece Martires.
Soriano said five people, aged between 4 and 23, had died.
None of the fatalities, however, was a recipient of the controversial
vaccine Dengvaxia, which was used in the national government dengue
immunization program starting 2016.
According to government records, Cavite is one of the provinces with
the highest number of schoolchildren inoculated with Dengvaxia, with
143,192 pupils from public schools.
Poor sanitation
The dengue outbreak in Cavite came amid the Department of Health’s
pronouncement that dengue cases in the country had declined during the
first two months of 2018.
Soriano said Cavite Gov. Jesus Crispin Remulla saw no reason yet to
declare a province-wide outbreak, but ordered an intensified cleanup
drive in communities to “search and destroy” places where mosquitoes
bred.
“You can’t make conclusions that because many [in Cavite] had
received the vaccine [Dengvaxia, it would have prevented an] outbreak,”
Soriano said in a telephone interview on Thursday.
For one, he said those who had died were outside the target age group of the immunization program.
He said major factors contributing to the rise of dengue cases were
still poor sanitation and lack of public awareness of the mosquito-borne
disease.
Source: http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/975692/dengue-outbreak-hits-9-cavite-towns-cities" rel="nofollow - http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/975692/dengue-outbreak-hits-9-cavite-towns-cities