
Labor Secretary Francis Tolentino welcomed leaders from the country’s information technology and business process…

Lawyers for Vice President Sara Duterte on Tuesday defended their frequent courtroom objections during her Senate…

The Department of Justice (DoJ) on Tuesday said prosecutors have completed a draft resolution on the criminal…

Dear Atty. Nico,

The US Peace Corps welcomed 54 new volunteers to Manila on 6 July as the agency celebrates its 65th anniversary of…

(FILE PHOTO)
What's your take?
Google Preferred Sources
Get more Daily Tribune stories in your search results
Add Daily Tribune as a preferred source on Google Search.
Continue reading
The Department of Health (DoH) announced on Monday that its accredited hospitals were instructed to establish cooling centers and hydrating stations amid the possible heat stress this summer.
In a statement, the DoH issued the updated guidelines on preventing and managing extreme heat health impacts as the heat index is expected to rise in the next few days heading into the peak of the country’s dry season.
Health Secretary Teodoro Herbosa directed all DoH units, including Department-retained hospitals and health facilities like the Bagong Urgent Care and Ambulatory Services centers, to implement key strategies and share them with local government units.
The key strategies are grouped into service continuity, which includes facility and staff preparedness and networking; public health literacy; establishment of cooling centers; climate-resilient health infrastructure, including hydration stations; and prompt detection and monitoring of heat-related illnesses.
Cooling centers are air-conditioned or well-ventilated areas close to public transportation routes that shall be made available and accessible to the general public, with priority to the elderly, young children, pregnant women, and persons with disabilities.
Hydration stations will make clean and safe drinking water continuously available to the public in all DoH facilities, especially during the anticipated peak hot hours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.