Sep 052013
 

An “alarming” 33 cases of leptospirosis, seven of them fatal, were noted this past week at the Philippine General Hospital, the University of the Philippines Manila said Friday.

UP Manila said Dr. Kristin Luzentales, PGH Chief Fellow of Section of Adult Nephrology, said 33 cases were admitted since August 31.

“The Section of Nephrology of Department of Medicine at the UP Philippine General Hospital has reported an alarming increased rate of admissions from leptospirosis,” it said.

This was shortly after floods and rain from the southwest monsoon enhanced by Tropical Storm Maring swamped Metro Manila and nearby areas in Luzon.

UP Manila noted 680 leptospirosis cases, 40 of them fatal, occur on average every year.

Citing information from the Philippine Clinical Practice Guidelines in 2010, it said leptospirosis is “seasonal with a peak incidence during the rainy months of July to October.”

PGH nephrologist Dr. Rey Tan said signs of leptospirosis may include:

  • acute febrile illness of at least two days and either residing in a flooded area or has high-risk exposure
  • at least two of the following symptoms: myalgia, calf tenderness, conjunctival suffusion, chills, abdominal pain, headache, jaundice, or oliguria

High-risk exposure involves wading in floods and contaminated water, contact with animal fluids, swimming in flood water or ingestion of contaminated water with or without cuts or wounds.

“Clinicians should therefore have a high index of suspicion among patients with febrile illness and high risk exposures because mortality may be as high as 15 percent,” Tan said.

He advised patients with fever, muscle pain and headache to consult their doctors immediately.

Tan warned of potentially fatal complications like kidney failure that will need urgent dialysis. — ELR, GMA News

Aug 212013
 
May Pasok: Areas where classes will resume on Thursday

Following the exit of Tropical Storm Maring from the Philippine Area of Responsibility on Wednesday and the expected improvement in weather conditions, some local governments have announced that classes would resume on Thursday, August 22. Since the weekend, at least a million people were affected by the heavy monsoon rain and floods enhanced by Maring. Here is a list of local governments which have opted to resume classes on Thursday. This list will be updated as more announcements are made. In NCR San Juan CityLas Piñas City 2nd district and all private schools in the cityQuezon City — KBK, GMA News

Aug 212013
 
Some areas flood-free despite monsoon rains

The town of Sta. Ana in Pampanga can be called a flood veteran. But this year, residents were not gearing up to evacuate their homes even after their province was placed under the state of calamity due to monsoon rains enhanced by Tropical Storm Maring. The secret? A newly build retaining wall along Matubig creek in the town. “Dati ang baha rito hanggang dibdib pero dahil napaayos na ang creek at hindi nag-overflow ito, kaya hindi binaha ang mga taga-Sta. Ana,” Pampanga provincial information officer Joel Mapiles told GMA News Online in a phone interview on Wednesday. The creek’s retaining wall is approximately 200 meters in length and about 1.2 m above the road. Apart from building concrete walls, Mapiles said that the creek has been dredged. “Silted na ‘yung mga water channels sa Pampanga kaya kailangang magkaroon ng dredging and slope protection ang mga water embankment,” he added. On Wednesday afternoon, Pampanga was placed under the state of calamity after a dike in Minalin town was breached on Tuesday, which caused flooding in low-lying areas. Metro Manila experience In Metro Manila there is another example of a once-flooded and now flood-free area due to engineering. In a text message, Metro Manila Development Authority chairman Francis Tolentino told GMA News Online that the P. Tuazon and Aurora tunnels in Cubao have been flood-free during the last few days. This is due to an additional submersible pump provided by the agency and installed in P. Tuazon tunnel, according to MMDA general Read More …

Aug 202013
 
Full List:  Areas under state of calamity after monsoon floods

In the aftermath of the floods brought by monsoon rains enhanced by Tropical Storm Maring, these provinces, cities, and municipalities have been declared under state of calamity: DECLARED UNDER STATE OF CALAMITY (as of 7:03 p.m. August 20, 2013): Laguna ProvinceBataan ProvinceCavite ProvinceMuntinlupa CityPateros Parañaque CityMalabonTaytay, RizalSan Mateo, RizalSta. Barbara, PangasinanNarvacan, Ilocos Sur Residents ride a bamboo raft to safety in Noveleta, Cavite, on Monday, August 19. Torrential rain paralyzed large parts of Luzon as neck-deep water swept through residential areas. Photo Credit:  Jay Directo/AFP —TJD/GMA News 

Aug 202013
 
US Embassy: P23.65M aid from US gov't for flood victims

The United States government is extending the equivalent of P23.65 million in aid for victims of the flooding and monsoon rain in Metro Manila and other parts of Luzon, the United States Embassy said Tuesday. US Ambassador to the Philippines Harry Thomas Jr. said the disaster is of “sufficient magnitude” to warrant a response from the US government. “USAID/OFDA [The US Agency for International Development-Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance], working with USAID/Philippines, and the US Embassy canvassed relief organizations operating in the area, and determined that the increasing number of displaced families seeking safe refuge from various evacuation centers and vulnerable families needing emergency assistance warranted an offer of assistance from the US government,” Thomas said. “Our thoughts and prayers go out to all of those who are affected by the floods, those who have lost loved ones, and important possessions. I want Filipinos to know that the United States stands by them in times of need,” he added. A news release from the US Embassy in Manila quoted USAID Philippines Mission Director Gloria Steele as saying the aid will include $50,000 for emergency non-food assistance and $500,000 for warehousing and logistics support (about P23,650,000 in total) from USAID/OFDA. This will be channeled “through a humanitarian agency working in the Philippines to facilitate the immediate delivery of non-food relief items, potentially including jerry cans, household kits, and tarps, to flood-affected communities,” Steele said. Heavy rain from the southwest monsoon enhanced by Tropical Storm Maring pummeled several parts of Luzon. Read More …

Aug 202013
 
Cavite rainfall hits record high, as many suffer Ondoy-like flooding

Cavite residents flee flooded homes, take shelter on street. Residents take shelter from the rain after floodwaters displaced them from their homes in Noveleta, Cavite on Monday. Local government rescue units in Cavite, now under state of calamity, appeared woefully unprepared. AFP PHOTO / Jay Directo For many in Cavite, now under a state of calamity, the past two days have been their Ondoy. A large swath of the province has been submerged as torrential rains have fallen since Sunday night. The rainfall has been at record levels in some areas, particularly in Sangley Point, a part of the provincial capital of Cavite City at the peninsular northernmost point of the province. PAGASA maintains a weather station in Sangley Point, long a naval base. During the Habagat deluge in 2012, rainfall at Sangley Point reached 354.2 mm in the 24 hours ending 8 a.m. on August 7, 2012, according to PAGASA weather division head Robert Sawi. In contrast, rainfall at the same location for the same period on August 20, 2013, reached 475.4 mm. This is even more than the average expected rainfall for the entire month, or 457.4 mm. “Ibig sabihin, mas higit sa isang buwan ang naibagsak na ulan sa loob lamang ng isang araw,” explained GMA News’ resident meteorologist, Nathaniel “Mang Tani” Cruz.  The rain intensity at Sangley Point surprised even DOST Secretary Ramon Montejo.  “We were also surprised at the rain intensity in some areas, especially in Sangley, Cavite,” he said. The disaster seems far from Read More …

Aug 192013
 
PAGASA: Tropical Storm Maring intensifies, nearly stationary

‘Erratic’ Maring lingers northeast of Batanes. Tropical Storm Maring seemed to make a U-turn over the Pacific Ocean section northeast of the Philippines and east of Taiwan. PAGASA Tropical Storm Maring (international name Trami) intensified Monday night and remained almost stationary off extreme northern Luzon, state weather forecasters said. PAGASA, in its 11 p.m. advisory, said Tropical Storm Maring was estimated to be 600 km east of Itbayat, Batanes as of 10 p.m. Maring was moving northwards at only 7 kph. By Tuesday evening, it is expected to be 560 km east-northeast of Itbayat, Batanes. By Wednesday evening it is expected to be 470 km northeast of Itbayat, Batanes. On Thursday evening, it is forecast to be 595 km north of Itbayat, Batanes or outside the Philippine area of responsibility. Maring packed maximum winds of 85 kph near the center, with gustiness of up to 100 kph. No public storm signals have been raised. Heavy to intense rainfall Maring may bring rainfall of 10 to 25 mm per hour (heavy to intense) within its 400-km diameter. It will also continue to enhance the southwest monsoon, which will bring moderate to heavy rainshowers and thunderstorms over Luzon, particularly over the western section. The enhanced monsoon has been bringing rain over Metro Manila and nearby provinces since Sunday. Meanwhile, PAGASA advised fishermen, “especially those using small seacraft,” not to venture out over the seaboards of Luzon due to heavy seas, also caused by the enhanced southwest monsoon. — DVM, GMA News