DoH Officer in Charge Maria Rosario Vergeire. PHOTO BY RYAN BALDEMOR
By Red Mendoza November 6, 2022
THE Department of Health (DoH) has advised parents and children against the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) after it was found that more than 200 children have been infected in the country with the disease.
This comes after the United States reported an increase in RSV cases among school-age children in the country, which is heavily affecting their health care systems capacity amid the coronavirus pandemic.
In a briefing on Friday, DoH Officer in Charge Maria Rosario Vergeire said the country has a surveillance system for RSV which is maintained by the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine.
She said based on the monitoring of sentinel hospitals from January 1 to August 31, there were 221 cases of RSV cases in children, with no reported fatality from the virus.
According to the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, RSV is a "common respiratory virus" that causes mild, cold-like symptoms. It can be transmitted through airborne viral droplets from infected individuals.
Among the symptoms of RSV infection are fever, colds, runny nose, decrease in appetite and coughing, which could lead to breathing difficulties.
RSV does not only infect young children but can also infect older people and can cause severe disease in high-risk individuals such as senior citizens.
A vaccine for RSV is under development by Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline, and is now under phase three clinical trials.
Vergeire said that RSV is a "self-limiting" virus, which means that a patient will recover from the disease without any form of medicine.
She urged parents to keep their children healthy and also to follow preventive measures such as getting vaccinated for other respiratory diseases.
"Our elderly are also vulnerable to this disease, so we urge them to take care of themselves," Vergeire added.
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