Home Segamat News JB is the worst Dengue area in Johor

Translate

English Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) French German Hindi Japanese Malay Thai

Latest Forum Post

Pink October Walk-a-thon
by maria
1st Sep 2010 10:50am
Electric Shavers
by enalpetibrina
1st Sep 2010 5:07am
Re:JOB VACANCIES INFO...
by syonarex
30th Aug 2010 3:56am
Re:STS 1981/82 Form 5...
by sathasevam krishnan
27th Aug 2010 12:33am
услуги химчистки межд...
by gligeottofilk
25th Aug 2010 5:23pm
JOB VACANCIES - KIP M...
by molly
25th Aug 2010 10:45am
Re:JOB VACANCIES INFO...
by syonarex
21st Aug 2010 4:55pm
My firs anakal sex
by AmefeSawSoodo
17th Aug 2010 1:46pm

Important Numbers

Balai Polis Segamat
07-9312 222, 07-9324 222
Majlis Daerah Segt Hotline
07-9311111
Segamat Hospital
07-9433333
Telekom Malaysia Bhd
100
Balai Bomba & Penyelamat (Fire & Rescue)
07-9314 444
Tenaga Nasional Berhad (TNB)
15454
SAJ Holdings (Water)
07-9432699
JKR Segamat (Roadworks)
07-9314040/ 4042
JB is the worst Dengue area in Johor PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Sunday, 07 February 2010 13:30

Taken from The Star Online

MUAR: Johor Baru recorded the highest number of dengue cases in the state at the start of 2010 with 35 cases reported up to Jan 9 this year. The city has four areas regarded as hot spots namely Taman Dahlia, Taman Century, Taman Desa Cemerlang and Taman Megah Ria.

State Women, Family, Health and Community Development Committee chairman Dr Robia Kosai said the number of cases showed that city residents still kept water containers around their homes. “These containers and uncollected rubbish make good breeding grounds for Aedes mosquitoes.

“We urge the people, especially those living in apartments and flats, to check their surroundings for such breeding places,” she told reporters after launching a wild boar hunting party in Kampung Parit Kemang near Sungai Balang recently. Dr Robia said the state recorded a drop in cases last year with 2,528 falling ill compared to 3,911 in 2008. The number of deaths due to dengue was 15 in 2008 and only three last year.

She said the drop was due to increasing awareness in looking after cleanliness of homes and the surroundings among Johoreans. She said the State Health Department had checked 494,564 premises and found 7,438 of them to be Aedes breeding grounds. The department issued 3,383 summonses and collected RM519,150 in compounds, she said, adding that it fogged 1,104,677 premises last year.

The department held more than 6,000 talks and distributed more than 500,000 pamphlets on the matter. “We hope that people will be more proactive in cleaning their homes and ridding all breeding grounds and rubbish in their areas this year,” she added.

 

Add comment

If you are not a registered user, your comment has to be approved before being published. If you are a registered user, make sure you login into Segamat.com first.


Security code
Refresh

 

Login

We have 26 guests online

Random Photo

Li Chi SJKC...
Image Detail

Poll of the week

Which area do you live in?