READ: PMA's guidelines on how to stay healthy this monsoon season

Web Desk
July 16, 2021

Rain in Pakistan not only causes power outages and damage to infrastructure, but it also spreads water-borne diseases

A man holds an umbrella as he walks through floodwaters during heavy rain in Lahore, Pakistan, July 3, 2018. — Reuters/File
A man holds an umbrella as he walks through floodwaters during heavy rain in Lahore, Pakistan, July 3, 2018. — Reuters/File

Rain in Pakistan not only causes power outages and damage to infrastructure, but it also becomes the reason for spreading water-borne diseases — like typhoid, gastroenteritis, Hepatitis A, E, and Cholera.

These diseases rise multiple times during the rainy season, according to the Pakistan Medical Association. Aside from the aforementioned diseases, the threat of Naegleria fowleri, commonly known as the brain-eating amoeba, is also growing these days.

This disease is very lethal and is caused by Naegleria fowleri present in non-chlorinated water, the medical association said.

"It enters into the brain through the nostrils and starts damaging the brain, Naegleria fowleri is popularly known as brain-eating amoeba because it eats the front lobe of the brain," the PMA said.

This causes meningioma-encephalitis, which is fatal in 95% of cases and the affected person dies eventually, the PMA added.

In a bid to prevent catching these diseases, here are PMA's guidelines:

Precautions for Naegleria fowleri


Advertisement

More From pakistan