Mucho Gusto wrote:
....And think about what it must smell like around town. After 22 days, with no garbage pick up....hot days, rainy days, dogs, cats, rats, etc.... It's gotta be a mess there....
It's already starting! Update in today's
A.M. Costa Rica:
Garbage crisis spawns dengue, rats and fears
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
A chronic garbage problem is being blamed for a
wave of dengue that is sweeping the municipality of Tibás.
At least 13 cases of the mosquito-born disease have been reported already, according to MarÃa Luisa Ãvila, the minister of Salud. Officials anticipate a rapid rise in cases because the start of the rainy season is dumping water on the Central Valley. Mosquitoes need water to propagate.
The municipality of Tibás presented a request for intervention to the Comisión Nacional de Prevención de Riesgos y Atención de Emergencias Wednesday. This followed discussion about the situation at the Consejo de Gobierno at Casa Presidencial earlier in the day.
The consejo declared an immediate emergency relating to the garbage and allocated 21 million colons ($41,500) for immediate action for collection.
A study by the Ministerio de Salud blamed the dengue problem on uncollected garbage. Garbage has been uncollected in the canton for three years.
Tibás is just north of San José, and officials fear that such an early outbreak of dengue in the major population center can result in unprecedented numbers of cases. Some 10,000 or so persons contract the disease each year. Most of these live on one of the two coasts. Last year two persons died.
In addition to dengue, the so-called bone-breaker disease, officials in Casa
Presidencial said Wednesday that the municipality also was facing a parallel outbreak of rats. The rats could be carrying leptospirosis, another serious disease, they said.
Tibás has faced years of substandard garbage collection from what local officials there attributed to a lack of money. Officials hope that with the initial money from the central government and support from the emergency commission that the standing garbage can be collected over about six months. Some empty lots in the community are waist deep in garbage sacks.
The emergency commission will meet on the municipal request next week. In the meantime, workers paid by the central government will begin the collections at night so that traffic is not impeded.
One case of leptospirosis appeared this year in a worker at the Parque Boliver zoo. There was no evidence that he contracted the disease via rats at the zoo, but zoo administrators took steps to provide protective gloves and boots to other workers. The bacterial disease is spread by contact.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control symptoms of leptospirosis include high fever, severe headache, chills, muscle aches, and vomiting, and may include jaundice (yellow skin and eyes), red eyes, abdominal pain, diarrhea, or a rash. If the disease is not treated, the patient could develop kidney damage, meningitis (inflammation of the membrane around the brain and spinal cord), liver failure, and respiratory distress, the centers said on a Web site. In rare cases death occurs, the centers added.