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MANILA, Philippines – Make drinking water safe from possible contamination.
This was the advice of Health Secretary Enrique Ona on Tuesday, August 7, amid heavy rainfall in Metro Manila and other regions. “Water must be purified to ensure that it is clean and fit for human consumption. Water that is not safe to drink can make you sick from a few hours or up to several weeks after taking it,” Ona said.
In a statement, Ona reminded everyone to always use pure clean water for drinking, preparing beverages, cooking, brushing teeth, washing hands and face and washing eating and cooking tools to avoid outbreaks of diarrhea.
“Clear water is not necessarily safe to drink. Purifying it by boiling or disinfection will make it potable,” Ona said.
Drinking clean water is especially important given the heightened risk of contracting leptospirosis from contaminated water in flood areas. Leptospirosis is a disease that causes fever, muscle pain, headaches in severe cases, respiratory problems, kidney failure and liver damage. Read here how to avoid getting the disease.
The following are guidelines in purifying water, according to the statement:
- Water must be filtered first to trap and remove large impurities. Any clean cloth or coffee filter can be used as a sieve.
- If the water is cloudy, it can be made to stand for half a day, after which, clear water can be scooped and then filtered.
- Boiling water kills all potential germs you may get from contaminated water. Heat water and allow it to boil for two minutes then let it cool. Boiled water that has cooled can be used immediately. Stirring it or putting it from one clean container to another container several times or adding a pinch of salt or powdered juice can improve taste.
- Water can be disinfected by adding 2 drops of 5% chlorine solution (unscented bleach) for every one (1) liter of unrefrigerated water. Allow it to stand for an hour. If a faint chlorine smell is detected after an hour, then it is safe to drink. Repeat the procedure if you cannot detect the smell after your first try. If it does not have the faint chlorine smell on the third try then the water must be discarded since it may contain many germs. To improve taste, allow it to air some more or transfer it from one clean container to another several times.
- Follow provided instructions if you opt to use commercial chlorine tablets for purifying water. Chlorine solutions are also available in most health centers or evacuation centers.- Rappler.com
For more weather updates, visit the #WeatherAlert Microsite.
Everyone is encouraged to help out. Check this list of evacuation centers and relief operations in Metro Manila for places near you.
If you have photos you’d like to share, send them to us @rapplerdotcom on Twitter, or send them via email to desk@rappler.com.
More in #WeatherAlert:
- Person Finder: 2012 Philippines Floods
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- US pledges P4-M for disaster relief
- LIVE BLOG: August 8 weather and disaster-related updates
- LIVE BLOG: Flood, traffic updates, photos
- Live Blog: Overnight monsoon and flood monitoring, August 8
- A night of fear and rain
- Almost P13M in relief aid distributed
- PHOTOS: PH capital, nearby cities at a standstill in floods
- Filipino values emerge in deluge
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