Home Featured Article Subic visitors urged to keep safe from summer heat

Subic visitors urged to keep safe from summer heat

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SUBIC BAY FREEPORT — Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority (SBMA) chairman and administrator Wilma “Amy” T. Eisma urged residents and visitors to this premier tourism destination to take extra precaution while enjoying the summer here.

“While we enjoy swimming in beaches, hiking and biking or camping in our forests, let us not forget to do the simple things, like drinking enough water to keep ourselves hydrated.”

She asked the Public Health and Safety Department (PHSD) of the SBMA to do an active information campaign on how to avoid heat exhaustion or heat stroke.

The average temperature in Subic Bay according to the Weather Bureau is 34-37 degrees centigrade during summer.

“And it can even go higher this year,” Eisma warned. Dr. Solomon R. Jacalne, manager of PHSD, advised Subic summer visitors to wear lightweight, light-colored, and loose-fi tting clothing.

“We should use sunblock or sunscreen with sun protection factor (SPF) 30-50 and try to stay in shady and cool places,” Jacalne said.

“Most important is to drink at least eight glasses of water a day, or fruit juices or drinks with electrolytes,” he added.

Jacalne also advised everyone to watch out for symptoms of heat exhaustion and heat stroke like faintness or dizziness, light-headedness, nausea or vomiting, weak, rapid pulse, weakness or fatigue, muscle cramps, and loss of consciousness.

“We can also monitor the color of our urine. Darker urine is a sign of dehydration,” he said.

Reports indicated that a Hanjin shipyard worker fainted at 9 a.m. Saturday while conducting waste segregation at the company’s scrap area.

John Mark Acdel, 24, a native of Agusan Del Sur, was reportedly revived before being rushed to the Lourdes Hospital where he died around 2 p.m.

Autopsy report stated the cause of death is cardio respiratory arrest due to heat stroke.

Meanwhile, the body of Reanosa Tolentino Pabayan, 35, from Pastolan Village, the wife of an Ayta, was found at the Malawaan River also on Saturday.

According to the family, Pabayan, who was an epileptic went fishing on midday. Medical personnel are still looking into the cause of her death.

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