Showing posts with label dengue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dengue. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Banker breaks mold to volunteer as nurse



By 



 2share18 14
Where many a young Filipino would turn to nursing as his or her ticket to the good life, a bank executive became a nurse so she could go as a volunteer to one of the poorest and, until quite recently, most violence-wracked nations on earth.
Annette Aguila, 38, left the safety of the executive suite to immerse herself in the swampy West African nation of Sierra Leone where an international campaign is under way to eradicate malaria, the killer disease.
Trading her business suit for scrubs, Aguila is on a 10-month tour of duty in the Sierra Leone capital of Freetown as one of four international volunteers handpicked by the Tony Blair Faith Foundation (TBFF) to carry out its “Faiths Act on Health” program.
“Through this endeavor, I can make a significant contribution to Sierra Leone, where life expectancy is only 47 years old. This low figure is significantly linked to malaria despite the fact that the disease can be prevented and is curable,” said Aguila in an e-mail message.
Aguila, a native of San Jose, Occidental Mindoro, was among only four volunteers chosen from 45 applicants from around the world.
The three other volunteers serving with her have notable experience in development work: Josephine Muhairwe, a doctor who has worked in Uganda and the United States; Canadian engineer Aatif Baskanderi, and Londoner Banke Adetayo, whose master’s thesis traced the history of global malaria eradication efforts.
A multifaith solution
Started in 2008 by the former British Prime Minister’s foundation, Faiths Act aims to “create a multifaith educational solution that will help eliminate deaths from malaria” through health education and training of local health workers, the distribution of treated mosquito nets and a grassroots information campaign.
The program also hopes to bridge the different faith communities in Sierra Leone, a diamond-rich nation of various ethnicities that has yet to recover from a decadelong civil war that ended in 2002. As the political situation remains volatile, Sierra Leone still struggles to rebuild its institutions, especially its health service system.
The country is known to have one of the highest infant mortality rates in the world, according to the TBFF, owing to the dearth of medical workers: there are only 102 medics for a population of around 6 million, or one doctor for every 56,000 people.
“If this model works in Sierra Leone, it can be replicated in other countries. I hope that eventually, people will see religious communities as a force for good rather than as a cause of division and conflicts,” said Aguila.
Aguila arrived in Freetown earlier this month, her second time in the country as a volunteer in a period of just two years. She had spent time there in 2009 as a volunteer nurse for the British charity Voluntary Service Overseas (VSO).
Second home
“What drew me to the fellowship was my desire to be part of the team leading the campaign against malaria in Sierra Leone, which I consider my second home,” she said.
“This gives me a chance to go back to Makena where I spent 15 months as a VSO volunteer. It thrills me that I am seeing again my former manager, my students, my friends, and most especially the kids in the neighborhood,” she said.
In the next 10 months, Aguila will be involved in training local volunteers and touching base with local health authorities to make sure the malaria prevention program is sustained.
Unhappy with corporate life
Aguila obtained her nursing license three years ago, having quit corporate life two years earlier.
“I spent almost a decade in the corporate world, at first pursuing a career with all the energy and enthusiasm of a young professional trying to climb the corporate ladder,” she said.
“But in my last two years with the bank, I was no longer happy and felt weighed down by the continuous stress at work and monotony of the routine. The main reason I lasted that long was that I liked the people I was working with, many of whom are now my closest friends,” she said.
She also needed a “welcome distraction” from a personal crisis, having just ended a 10-year relationship. She decided to take a second degree, enrolling in a nursing course at the University of Makati.
A natural
According to Aguila, a political science graduate of the University of the Philippines, she may have been unconsciously drawn to the health services field because of her mother’s being a dentist. From childhood, she had been in the habit of assisting at the dental clinic in her free time.
The combination of health service and volunteering was apparently also in her blood: her family raised her in an atmosphere of giving, from church work to helping strangers in need.
“In third grade, a few days before Christmas a very young Mangyan couple with a newborn in the mother’s arms showed up at our doorstep asking for food. Without a second thought, my parents welcomed them into the house,” she said.
“They stayed with us for several days until after Christmas. Oman and his wife Kili are constant visitors at our house not only during the Christmas season but any time of the year,” she said.
Very Filipino qualities
She has brought with her to the country she considers her second home qualities that she believes are very Filipino: resilience, hard work and cheerfulness.
“These qualities are important especially when working in a challenging environment. It pleases me to know that our skills and experience are as valuable as those of our foreign counterparts’,” said Aguila.
“The life of a volunteer can be very challenging but it can also be a very fulfilling experience. You may be surprised to discover that by changing the lives of others, you can actually be saving your own,” she said.

Friday, May 13, 2011

Global patronage for mosquito trap seen



By GABRIEL S. MABUTAS
MANILA, Philippines — A mosquito expert has expressed optimism that the government-developed Ovicidal Larvicidal mosquito Trap (OLTrap) will eventually draw patronage from the global community, saying its non-toxicity has made it the best mosquito killer developed so far all over the world.
Dr. Lilia Delas Llagas, one of the most prominent entomologists in the country, said the OLTrap – which has so far proven its acceptability to the World Health Organization (WHO), has great potentials of being adopted internationally as a major tool in the fight against mosquito-borne diseases like dengue, considering its non-toxic nature.
“As far as I know, this is the first time that we do have an organic substance that can be used locally and globally for larvicidal and ovicidal mosquito killer. (Therefore) it has the greatest potential for local and international consumption,” she said.
Delas Llagas said other countries tried to develop mosquito traps to reduce its population, but ended up using synthetic substances.
“We are proud to say that the country’s very own is non-toxic,” she said.
Science and Technology Secretary Mario Montejo said the OLTrap has already proven its trapping and killing efficacy many times in both laboratory and field testing.
He said that based on their testing in certain areas before the partial rollout of the OLTrap, the technology, if properly applied, has the capacity to kill 80 percent of mosquitoes in an area, and stunt the remaining 20 percent.
Delas Llagas said that though the technology appears to have been developed and rendered in so short a time, it has gone through rigid testing, and was based on extensive studies.
“It is not a product of illusion, but one of hard work with proven efficacy of attracting and killing mosquitoes, and reducing their population,” he said.
Montejo said seven days from the installation of OLTrap in an area, reduction in mosquito populations could already be felt.
Two months after the start of OLTrap installations, he said, there would be a significant reduction in the population.
“The national rollout of the OL Mosquito trap is our immediate response to prevent and control the deadly dengue disease. The ovicidal and larvicidal mosquito trap is our low-cost yet effective device designed to reduce the population of the dengue-carrying mosquitoes by attracting and killing their eggs in a simple but effective science-based solution,” Montejo said
So far, the DoST and the Department of Health have already distributed the OLTraps to the high risk areas in Leyte and Cagayan Valley through their regional offices and the local government units concerned.

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Sunday, September 19, 2010

In villages of Aetas, cure found in plants



By Tonette Orejas
Central Luzon Desk

MABALACAT, Pampanga, Philippines—Villagers in Barangays Marcos and Macapagal here boil the leaves of acacia and roots of cogon together. The mixture is an old solution to high fever and malaria and is used to wash the patient down to lower his body temperature.

It is now being used to combat dengue-carrying mosquitoes.
Patients are made to drink a concentrated version of the mixture, according to Robert Serrano, a tribal leader in the two villages.

Acacia and cogon abound in the area.

But Aetas do not rely only on this indigenous cure, he added. They avail themselves of medical help andmedicines at the provincial government-run Mabalacat district hospital in the town proper.


The Aeta way

In Barangay Bihawo in Botolan, Zambales, the 150 Aeta families there keep dengue away by keeping their resettlement site clean, according to Carlito Domulot, chair of the Lubos na Alyansa ng mga Katutubo Ayta sa Sambales (Lakas).
For two years now, they have maintained an organic farm in nearby Barangay San Juan where they grow 100-percent chemical-free vegetables.

“There is not one case of dengue in our tribe for years,” Domulot, 55, said in a phone interview. “Mosquitoes are rare here,” he added, referring to the carriers of the dengue virus.

Should a dengue case occur, Domulot said he would go up their old village at Villar near Mt. Pinatubo to look for “kupit-kupit,” a highland grass that rises to a person’s knee.

The leaves are heated and pressed on the forehead of a sick person. The roots are boiled to produce a mixture for drinking, Domulot said.


Other cures

For Aetas originally from Barangay Poon Bato in Botolan, Zambales (they now live in Itanglew resettlement), the big leaves of a tree called “dita” is a cure for high fever and malaria.

Elsa Novo, a village councilor, said old folk used dita during the malaria outbreaks in evacuation centers from 1992 to 1994. The tree is difficult to find in the upper slopes of Mt. Pinatubo, she said.

Aetas have growing trust for modern medical help, Novo said. Last week, a 17-year-old boy survived dengue because his parents immediately took him to a local hospital.

In Ifugao, which recorded 187 dengue cases from January to July this year, indigenous communities have also resorted to their old remedies against malaria-carrying mosquitoes, which used to be their bigger seasonal health problem.

Dengue Fever (Epidemics)

Santos Bayucca, an Ifugao environmental advocate, said villagers have started burning dried peelings of locally grown pomelo. The smokey pomelo aroma had been credited for warding off mosquitoes and other insects, Bayucca said. With a report from EV Espiritu, Inquirer Northern Luzon