QUETTA: The number of vector-borne disease, malaria is sharply increasing in the flood-hit districts of Balochistan on Monday.
As per sources, five flood-hit districts of Balochistan including, Suhbatpur, Jaffarabad, Nasirabad, Jhal Magsi and Dera Bugti have reported as many as 3,131 malaria cases.
The report say during the last 14 days as many as 37,224 malaria cases have been registered in the aforesaid districts of Balochistan. The current positivity ratio for the vector-borne disease is recorded at 49pc in the province.
Out of total of 37,224 cases, the number of children aged under five years is 6,237 and 31,223 cases are of people aged over five years in Balochistan, the sources said.
Separately, as many as 12 flood-hit districts had been declared ‘sensitive’ for malaria as per sources.
Sources say Khairpur, Sanghar, Shaheed Benazirabad, Naushehro Feroze, Badin, Mirpurkhas, Qambar, Jacobabad, Jamshoro, Larkana, Shikarpur and Dadu are sensitive in the wake of Maralia disease outbreak.
sees 3,131 malaria cases in past 24 hours
QUETTA, Oct 03 (INP): The number of vector-borne disease, malaria is sharply increasing in the flood-hit districts of Balochistan on Monday.
As per sources, five flood-hit districts of Balochistan including, Suhbatpur, Jaffarabad, Nasirabad, Jhal Magsi and Dera Bugti have reported as many as 3,131 malaria cases.
The report say during the last 14 days as many as 37,224 malaria cases have been registered in the aforesaid districts of Balochistan. The current positivity ratio for the vector-borne disease is recorded at 49pc in the province.
Out of total of 37,224 cases, the number of children aged under five years is 6,237 and 31,223 cases are of people aged over five years in Balochistan, the sources said.
Separately, as many as 12 flood-hit districts had been declared ‘sensitive’ for malaria as per sources.
Sources say Khairpur, Sanghar, Shaheed Benazirabad, Naushehro Feroze, Badin, Mirpurkhas, Qambar, Jacobabad, Jamshoro, Larkana, Shikarpur and Dadu are sensitive in the wake of Maralia disease outbreak.