When killer mosquitoes strike, most victims are children

His eyes are groggy. His legs bear patches of dark rashes. His gums show signs of bleeding as he opens his mouth for the doctor to examine.

"Nanginginig ako at masakit ang ulo ko nang isugod ako sa ospital (I was shivering and had a headache when I was rushed to hospital)," says 22-year-old Jomar Lauta, a tricycle driver.

Lauta is one of more than a hundred patients confined for dengue fever at San Lazaro Hospital in Manila. About 90 percent of those receiving medication are children.

Dengue is a flu-like viral illness spread by an infected female mosquito, the Aedes aegypti. Dengue hemorrhagic fever, like that of Lauta, is a severe, often fatal, complication of dengue fever.

The Department of Health (DOH) is worried with the onslaught of the rainy season. Dengue cases usually shoot up when it rains. Stagnant, but clear, water is the favorite breeding ground of Aedes mosquitoes that sting during daytime.

In the first twelve days of the year, dengue cases at San Lazaro Hospital alone nearly tripled compared to the same period last year. Five of the 380 patients died.

In Metro Manila, several villages in at least three cities – Manila, Quezon and Caloocan – were identified for dengue clustering, meaning two or more cases have been registered in a span of two weeks.

All-time high

In 2007, the Philippines recorded an all-time high in the number of dengue cases. Of the 43,938 dengue cases last year, 407 patients died.

Quezon City had the most number of villages that had clustering of dengue cases. More than 2,000 people from 18 villages were hospitalized for dengue.

Mayor Sonny Belmonte was quick to emphasize that the city is one-fourth of Metro Manila in terms of population. The city is home to about 2.5 million people, more than 50 percent of whom live in slums where household water storage is common and where solid waste disposal services are inadequate.

"It's no wonder why we lead in the list," says Belmonte, adding that the city was not amiss in its efforts to solve the problem. He said dengue cases in the city have gone down by three percent in 2007 compared to the previous year.

Belmonte authorized village leaders to tap the government’s calamity fund, which is five percent of the village budget, to the fight against dengue.

Barangay Batasan Hills lead the list of dengue areas with 144 cases. One of its residents, Mary Grace Provido, still remembers the pain and the fear she felt when her daughter, Jenilyn, who was five years old then, was hospitalized for dengue in July.

"Alam ko kasi na nakamamatay ang dengue (I know that dengue kills)," says Provido.

She says she's still stuck in debt for the P6,000 hospital bill. She has no work and her family of five relies on the meager income of her husband who works at a construction site.

Beyond gov’t control

The Health department has done its best to fight dengue, claims Health Secretary Francisco Duque III. It has forged partnerships with the Education department and local government units. It has also managed to convince the private sector to fund projects to fight the spread of dengue-carrying mosquitoes.

Despite the government’s efforts, dengue seems to be out of control.

Duque says there are factors beyond the government’s control, including global warming and population explosion.

He says erratic weather patterns and higher temperatures brought by global warming favored the penetration of mosquitoes.

Rapid population growth and poverty translate to thicker crowds in depressed areas that consequently allow mosquitoes to spread.

Duque also blames people’s attitude. Albeit they know what to do, they don’t act until they become victims and get to see the disease face-to-face.

“It’s every Filipino’s responsibility to fight dengue," Duque says.

From monkeys to humans

The World Health Organization reveals that there are studies that show monkeys were infected by dengue and perhaps served as source for uninfected mosquitoes, which passes the virus to humans.

The virus incubates in the system of an infected mosquito from eight to 10 days when it is already capable, during blood feeding, of transmitting the virus to susceptible individuals.

It may also transmit the virus to its offspring by transovarial (via the mosquitoes’ eggs) transmission.

For infected humans, the virus circulates in the blood for two to seven days. During this period the victims have fever. WHO studies show that Aedes mosquitoes can get the virus from the victim when they feed. Then the cycle goes on.

Due to the absence of a vaccine to prevent dengue, WHO says the prevalence of the disease, which was first discovered in the 1950s in Thailand and in the Philippines, has grown dramatically in recent decades.

The disease is now endemic to more than 100 countries, expanding to Africa, the Americas, Eastern Mediterranean and the Western Pacific. Some 2500 million people, two-fifths of the world’s population, are now at risk from dengue, a big leap from only nine countries having dengue epidemics in 1970.

Metro Manila's urban poor find creative ways to quench thirst

Every morning, from Monday to Wednesday, Josephine Manabat, a petite woman in her late 40s, walks two blocks from her home to watch over a public faucet at a street corner in the slums of Tondo, Manila.

Josephine used to be a collector for the numbers racket jueteng before going into the water business. She also used to hawk a local brand of chocolate milk drink, walking several kilometers a day under the heat of the sun all the way to the nearby province of Cavite.

Today, however, Josephine stands guard at a street corner in Manila’s Barangay 106. She holds a green hose where the cold water gushes all day. Around her waist is a purple belt bag where she deposits the coins her neighbors pay for the water – P1 for every 18-liter container. Josephine says a family of five normally consumes four containers of water a day.

She collects an average of P500 a day, when it rains, and P800 during summer. The coins are not Josephine’s alone. She only gets P150 a day, free supply of water, free snacks and a few sticks of cigarette. The rest of the money she remits to the village chief who pays the private concessionaire Maynilad Water Services Inc. for the water connection.

About 300 families or 1,800 people in the village depend on Josephine’s faucet.

Most slum dwellers, like Josephine’s neighbors, live by scavenging from the nearby dump and from the garbage bins that litter the streets of Manila. Others make money from making charcoal.

No access

A study done by the Asian Development Bank reveals that more than two-thirds of Metro Manila’s population not served by giant concessionaires Maynilad and Manila Water Co. still has no direct connection to clean water.

ADB’s Water Supply Service Market Survey, which polled 13,791 households in Metro Manila, also reveals that only 28 percent of this sample has piped water from small-scale water providers. Non-piped water sources include private wells, open wells, rivers, rain, deep wells and common faucets or standpipes. The figures show the urgent need to improve the supply of clean water in the ever-growing metropolis.

Looking for solutions

A few kilometers from Josephine’s village is a cluster of 21 low-cost buildings that sit on what used to be Metro Manila’s dump. The building houses residents displaced by government projects and those who once lived in slums. Each building has 120 units that measure 30 square meters each that sometimes hosts up to three families. Each building has only one faucet.

In Building 28, the faucet is supervised by an association headed by Mariano Callueng with the help of four others. The association charges P2 for every 18 liters of water. The money raised from the collection is used to pay the water concessionaire. The average monthly water bill for the building is about P38,000. The organization is also still paying Maynilad P13,809 a month, for the next two years, for debts it incurred in the past.

Mataas nga ang sinisingil namin pero ito ang kailangan para hindi kami magkautang uli, para hindi kami maputulan ng tubig. Ngayon na lang din kami makakaahon," Mario says.

From 2005 to 2006, Maynilad cut the water supply in the area. The residents, most of whom are scavengers and garbage collectors, had run up water bills amounting to almost P9 million. The money collected from the residents had been pocketed by their organization’s officers. For a year, the residents have to buy a limited amount of water from nearby villages until Maynilad agreed to reconsider its decision and restructure the payment of the residents’s debt.

Thus was born the idea of one water association, and one faucet per building.

Maynilad admits that providing access to water through public faucets is not the ideal arrangement. Steve Aspacio of Maynilad who is in charge of the villages where Josephine and Mario live says the arrangement is the only plausible and profitable way for the company to provide water to slum dwellers.

Hindi na kakayanin kapag lahat ng taga looban kakabitan. Malulugi na," Steve says. The slums are too crowded, the alleys separating the shanties too narrow, for the water concessionaire to lay pipes to every household. The residents do not even own the land where they live and could be removed by authorities.

Quenching their thirst

Despite having to share only a faucet, Tondo’s slum dwellers are satisfied.

Josephine is comfortable with her new way of earning a living. Gone are the days of collecting jueteng bets and walking several kilometers under the heat of the sun to sell chocolate drinks. Mario is thankful that he and his neighbors already have regular access to clean water. He was even able to save enough cash to install electric bulbs in dark corners of the building.

Ang laki talagang tulong at tipid noong nakabit ito," Josephine says, referring to the public faucet. “Dati, noong sa kabila pa kami kumukuha ng tubig, ang mahal ng binabayaran namin, lalo na sa mga taga-igib."

There is no more murky brown liquid they call water three years ago. No more rush to the public hospital after drinking the bacteria-filled liquid they used to quench their thirst.

An official from Josephine’s village used to tell of his experience when he brought 25 people suffering from stomach pain to the hospital after drinking the filth that used to come out of their water taps.

The residents of Tondo’s slums might not have heard of the ADB study. It would probably not matter to them at all.

Another ADB study reveals that the Philippines is regressing in its compliance with Target 10 of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. Target 10 is the plan to cut into half by 2015 the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.

In 1990, 95 percent of urban dwellers had access to safe drinking water. In 2004, the proportion slipped to 87 percent. The study points to the swelling urban population as the cause of the decline.

Josephine and Mario, however, seem not to care. The limited access they have to the gushing liquid from their faucet is already a dream come true. Let the future take care of itself, they might have said. For now, they just let the water flow. - GMANews.TV

Regine Velasquez decides to stay as GMA Kapuso




"I decided to stay in GMA. Mananatili akong Kapuso sa SOP at susunod pang mga programa," she said in a speech before SOP's segment “Constellation of Stars."

Velasquez said she chose to be where she feels she would be happy.

She thanked GMA president, chairman, and chief executive officer Felipe Gozon and other officials of the network for "giving me time to think things over and for not letting go of me."

She also thanked GMA Films president Annette Gozon-Abrogar "for understanding me," her family "for standing by me," sister Cacai "for helping me out"; and boyfriend Ogie Alcasid for supporting her during the days "that I felt I was alone in this inner battle."

Regine said her goodbye to SOP two weeks ago was a really hard thing to do and promised: "I will never do it again." Amita Legaspi, GMANews.TV

Here is the transcript of Regine's speech:

Marami ang nagtanong sa inyo bakit kami nag-iyakan a few weeks back. It is true I wanted to say goodbye to SOP. Hindi lang sa katrabaho kundi sa mga itinuturing kong malalapit na kaibigan at mahalaga po sa puso ko.

Naiyak po ako noon dahil pagkatapos ng maraming taon na pagsasama naming, nahihirapan po akong magpaalam sa kanila.

Why did I want to say goodbye?

Because I wanted to try other venues as a performer and it so happen na ‘yun pong gusto kong gawin na project ay nandun po sa kabilang istasyon.

It is not that I am not happy here with GMA. Hindi po yun ang rason. You've seen me become who I am with this network. Marami po tayong programang pinagsamahan and I am equally grateful to all of you at sa GMA for giving me the opportunity to share what I can do sa inyong lahat.

My relationship with this network goes beyond any binding contract. Everything is bound by mutual trust and respect.

At the time na nagpa-interview po ako sa showbiz talk show sa kabilang istasyon I said I was jobless because I felt I have nothing substantial to do. Hindi dahil sa walang offer ang GMA sa akin.

Sumilao Farmers press Arroyo on Promise land

MANILA, Philippines - Farmers from Sumilao town in Bukidnon who returned to Manila last week to remind President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo of her promise to give them their ancestral land do not intend to return until she fulfills it.

Q-11 television reported Monday noon that the farmers complained that a court gave the government 15 days from December 18 last year to give back the 144 hectares of "ancestral" land.

But up to now, they said that instead of getting their titles, San Miguel Foods Inc. (SMFI) continued its construction of a piggery in the contested land.

The farmers said they plan to meet Tuesday with Manila Archbishop Gaudencio Cardinal Rosales on the matter. Rosales and other Church officials supported them when they marched to Manila last year.

Last year, the farmers marched more than 1,700 km to Manila from October to December to fight for their ancestral land.

With support from Catholic Church officials, they managed to get an audience with President