H&FW Issue Public Awareness On Dengue - Eastern Mirror
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Nagaland

H&FW issue public awareness on dengue

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By EMN Updated: Jul 15, 2018 11:35 pm

Dimapur, July 15 (EMN): July being observed as Anti-Dengue month and also keeping in view with the rise in the number of dengue cases every year in the state, Directorate of Health and Family Welfare has issued public awareness on dengue.

What is dengue?

Dengue is a viral disease. It is transmitted by the bite of Aedes mosquito. The mosquito bites in day time. Man develops the disease after 5-6 days of being bitten by an infective mosquito.

Dengue occurs in two forms

Dengue Fever (DF) and dengue Haemorrhagic Fever (DHF)

Signs and symptoms of dengue fever

Sudden onset of high fever; severe headache; pain behind the eyes which worsens with eye movement; muscle and joint pains; loss of sense of taste and appetite; measles like rash over the chest and  upper limbs.

Age group and sex affected

All age groups and both sex are affected. Deaths occur more in children.

Transmission from one person to another

Dengue fever is caused by the bite of Aedes mosquito.

When the mosquito bites a person with Dengue fever, it picks up the germs of the disease along with the blood.

This germ known as dengue virus develops within the mosquito in a few days.

When this mosquito again bites a healthy person, it introduces the germs into the blood.

After a few days the person becomes sick with high fever and other symptoms of dengue.

Breeding places

Aedes mosquito breed in any type of manmade containers or water storage containers even having small quality of water like desert coolers, water storage containers, tyres, overhead tanks, drums, jar, buckets, flower vases, plant saucers, tanks, bottles, tin, roof gutters, refrigerator drip pans, cement blocks, cemetery urns, bamboo stumps, tree holes and many more places where rain water collects or is stored.

Eggs of mosquito can live without water for more than one year.

Preventive and control measures

  1. All water storage containers should be covered.
  2. Remove/ destroy all disposable, unused materials lying in and around the house, like old tyres, broken pots, crockery etc.
  3. Dry all water storage utensils, water coolers, flower vases, water vessels for birds and animals, fridge trays at least once a week before re-filling.
  4. Fill up the ditches and other unwanted water collection sites around the houses.
  5. Put insecticides, petrol, k oil, in coolers, containers etc once a week, which cannot be emptied or cleaned.
  6. Introduce larvivorous fish in stagnant water bodies, contact assistant director of UMS Dimapur.

Personal protection measures

  1. Wear clothes that cover the whole body in day time.
  2. Use appropriate wire mesh in doors and windows of the house.
  3. Ensure that at least pregnant women and children sleep under mosquito net during day time, preferably insecticide treated bed nets.
  4. Insecticide treated mosquito nets are more effective as they kill mosquitoes as well as other bugs and insects.
  5. Use mosquito repellent lotion, creams like good-knight, odomos etc.

Contact

If there is any suspected case which matches the signs and symptoms described above, contact the nearest hospital. Facility for testing is available for free at District Hospital in Dimapur.

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By EMN Updated: Jul 15, 2018 11:35:12 pm
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