A health worker is spraying chemicals to kill mosquito larva (Photo: VNA)
Dong Nai (VNA) 𝓡– The southern province of Dong Nai is stepping up efforts to increase awareness of Zika virus among workers.
Director of the provincial Preventive Health Centre Bach Thai Binh said the locality is home to tens of industrial parks with around 900,000 workers.
Many of them are living in Ho Chi Minh City, and Ba Ria-Vung Tau and Binh Duong provinces, where Zika infections were detected, he added.
Therefore, the province is coordinating with the labour federation and the management board of industrial parks to increase communication campaigns, he said.
The health sector warned workers who regularly travel to disease-affected areas to visit medical facilitations for a check-up.
The province also held training courses on Zika detection for nurses and doctors.
A number of campaigns have been launched to kill mosquito larva in 171 communes and wards.
Vietnam detected 65 Zika cases by November 19, including 62 in Ho Chi Minh City.
The Zika virus is transmitted to humans primarily through Aedes aegypty mosquito bites and sexual intercourse.
The symptoms of Zika infection include fever, conjunctivitis, headaches and muscle pains. Zika infection during pregnancy may lead to microcephaly in babies, which is responsible for incomplete brain development and an unusually small head.
The Health Ministry launched a mosquito-killing drive across the country on Oct. 21 in the context of dengue fever spreading in central and southern regions and the discovery of the 7th Zika nfection.
The Department of Preventive Medicine under the Ministry of Health on October 30 confirmed Vietnam’s first microcephaly case likely related to the Zika virus.
Vietnam now boasts a nationwide healthcare network with 1,665 hospitals, 384 of which are non-public, supported by local commune- and ward-level stations. At the end of 2024, hospital bed capacity reached 34 per 10,000 people, slightly above the global average.
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After such a long time, the law has revealed many limitations, prompting the Ministry of Health (MoH) to gather opinions to amend the law to give more chances to thousands of patients every year.
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The centre not only serves residents living on the island, but also receives tens of thousands of visitors every year, according to Assoc Prof Dr Tang Chi Thuong, Director of the HCM CIty Department of Health.
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After more than three weeks of intensive treatment, the patient's pneumonia improved, breathing stabilised, sedation was reduced, and the breathing tube was removed. He is now conscious, able to eat orally, and in recovery.