Manila, October 22: The World Health Organization will send an emergency team to help the Philippines deal with a bacterial disease outbreak that has killed at least 148 people and sickened nearly 2,000 in and around the flood-hit capital, officials said Thursday.
Outbreaks of leptospirosis, spread by water contaminated with the urine of rats, dogs and other animals, have compounded the problems faced by the Philippines after back-to-back storms since late last month killed more than 900 people and devastated northern regions.
At least 148 have died and 1,963 people have been sickened in the capital, Manila, and outlying suburbs. Infections have also been reported in the nearby provinces of Rizal and Laguna, Health Secretary Francisco Duque said.
Government medical workers have given antibiotics to 1.3 million people as a preventive step, and the government has asked WHO and other foreign health agencies for help.
People are infected through exposed cuts and bruises. The disease can cause high fever, headache, sore muscles and vomiting. In extreme cases, it can lead to kidney failure and internal bleeding that can cause death.
Peter Cordingley, WHO spokesman for the Western Pacific region, said many communities remain flooded and the number of infections could continue to grow, though number of fresh cases reported in government hospitals has begun to drop as waters recede in some communities.
WHO has assembled an emergency response team “and they’ll be here very soon,” Cordingley told The Associated Press.
Yet another storm, Typhoon Lupit, is hovering near the country’s mountainous north, where army troops and disaster response officials have ferried tons of food aid and rubber boats and started evacuating villagers.
“The potential for crisis is still there,” Duque said.
Lupit has remained almost stationary in recent days but may hit the northern province of Cagayan on Friday, government forecaster Nathaniel Cruz said.
–Agencies