Bacolod Records First Suspected Leptospirosis Death of 2025
BACOLOD CITY – The City Health Office (CHO) has reported the first suspected leptospirosis fatality of the year following the death of a 52-year-old man from Barangay Villamonte. Dr. Grace Tan, head of the CHO’s Environmental Sanitation Division, said the patient had an undocumented fever and consultation before being referred for

By Glazyl M. Jopson
By Glazyl M. Jopson
BACOLOD CITY – The City Health Office (CHO) has reported the first suspected leptospirosis fatality of the year following the death of a 52-year-old man from Barangay Villamonte.
Dr. Grace Tan, head of the CHO’s Environmental Sanitation Division, said the patient had an undocumented fever and consultation before being referred for admission on Jan. 25 due to difficulty breathing. He died the following day.
Tan said the patient worked in construction and general services and often cleaned canals and drainages without wearing boots or gloves.
From Feb. 2 to 8, the CHO recorded four leptospirosis cases, with one case each in Barangays 1, Villamonte, Mansilingan, and Estefania.
This marks a 20% decrease compared to the same period last year, which saw five cases and one death.
The CHO reminded the public to wear boots when wading through floodwaters, avoid swimming in contaminated water, and properly dispose of garbage to prevent the spread of rats, which carry leptospirosis.
Article Information
Comments (0)
LEAVE A REPLY
No comments yet
Be the first to share your thoughts!
Related Articles

HIGH TECH REVOLUTION: MORE Power upgrades ‘overstressed’ relics to unmanned, SCADA-ready hubs
When MORE Electric and Power Corporation took over power distribution in Iloilo City in 2020, its engineers walked into five deteriorating substations running on rusted equipment, overloaded transformers, and infrastructure that in some cases had not been substantially upgraded in 30 years. Five years on, four of those substations have


