Negros Oriental mulls border control as HFMD cases climb to 156

By Mary Judaline Partlow

February 18, 2023, 5:17 pm

<p><strong>HANDWASHING.</strong> Negros Oriental Acting Provincial Health Officer Dr. Liland Estacion on Saturday (Feb. 18, 2023) urges the public, especially children, to practice regular handwashing after recent reports of increasing cases of Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease (HFMD) in the province. She said children aged 1 year to 10 years are most vulnerable to HMFD, especially with the resumption of face-to-face classes. <em>(Photo courtesy of Negros Oriental PIO)</em></p>

HANDWASHING. Negros Oriental Acting Provincial Health Officer Dr. Liland Estacion on Saturday (Feb. 18, 2023) urges the public, especially children, to practice regular handwashing after recent reports of increasing cases of Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease (HFMD) in the province. She said children aged 1 year to 10 years are most vulnerable to HMFD, especially with the resumption of face-to-face classes. (Photo courtesy of Negros Oriental PIO)

DUMAGUETE CITY – Negros Oriental has logged 156 cases of hand, foot, and mouth disease (HFMD) with mostly young children being affected, a health official said on Saturday.

Acting Provincial Health Officer Dr. Liland Estacion said the HFMD cases were monitored in many areas in the province.

“Most of those affected by this infectious disease are children aged 1 to 10, comprising about 90 percent of the total cases,” she said, citing the latest morbidity weekly report.

As the disease can be easily transmitted to children, especially because face-to-face classes have resumed, Estacion advised parents to remind them to wash their hands before eating.

“The cases are usually not serious and can be resolved within 7 to 10 days, with the usual treatment of symptoms, such as giving analgesics for those with fever,” she said.

Isolation is also another way of preventing transmission, she added.

The PHO will tap school nurses and embark on massive information dissemination drives to alert the public against HFMD.

Meanwhile, Estacion said she would consult Governor Roel Degamo on the possibility of securing or tightening the borders of Negros Oriental after HMFD cases ballooned in Negros Occidental in recent weeks.

Media reports said cases on the other side of the island rose by 6,300 percent, leading to officials calling for a declaration of an outbreak.

HFMD symptoms include fever, blisters in the mouth, hands, and feet, and sore throat. (PNA)

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