The toll due to Japanese Encephalitis which stood at 36 mounted to 38 following the death of two more children who were undergoing in the district headquarters hospital here, Chief District Medical Officer (CDMO), U S Mishra said.
Unofficial sources, however, put the death toll at not less than 41, while around 60 patients suffering from the deadly vector-borne disease are now undergoing treatment at the hospital.
At least 14 mobile health teams were engaged to tackle the situation, teams of doctors and experts from Berhampur and Bhubaneswar also camped in the district as part of the ongoing drive to contain the disease, he said.
The Collector has also directed government employees to undertake a massive awareness drive in the district about the disease in collaboration with local representatives.
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As the killer disease gets transmitted from pigs to mosquitoes and from them to human beings, particularly children, the administration has already started isolating pigs away from human habitats by keeping them in special enclosures, officials said.
Meanwhile, a BJP fact-finding team led by party's state unit Secretary Bhrugu Buxipatra visited the disease-hit areas and interacted with both villagers as well as health officials and others.
Holding the state government responsible for the "alarming" situation, Buxipatra said though the disease had been surfacing at intervals in the backward district since 2011, the Naveen Patnaik regime failed to take concrete steps to prevent its recurrence.
The state government has not only failed to arrange vaccines in time, it was also unable to check spread of the diease which has claimed so many lives, he said, adding that the Centre is keen to extend all necessary cooperation and help to the state in tackling the crisis.
Meanwhile, Japanese Encephalitis appeared to have spread outside Malkangiri also as two cases of the disease were reported from Balasore and Puri districts, officials said.
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