One of the preschool teacher of Little Greenhouse pre-school at Bukit Batok Street 31, was confirmed to have contracted active tuberculosis (TB). As a result, the students and the staffs of the school are obliged to take the screening to make sure that they are not infected.

104 children and 20 staffs of the school all had been screened, the Ministry of Health (MOH) said in its statement on 24 August. The children below 5 years old had a skin test and chest X-ray, while those above 5 years old were given blood tests.

The teacher who was infected with the disease had called school in sick on Thursday (18 August). Ms Ruth Kua, deputy chief operating officer of Global EduHub, the pre-school’s parent company, said she did not show any signs of being infected by the disease before.

Ms Kua said that MOH had called them on Friday (19 August) to tell them about the health condition of the teacher, as she did not update her condition to the school. MOH stated that teacher is now undergoing treatment.

The teacher was granted medical leave for two weeks and she remains on contract with the school till next June. “The teacher needs her own rest and has an MC (medical certificate). The school has to honour it. We did not terminate her, as that would mean that she did not perform her job well as a teacher,” said Ms Kua.

As the school received the news, it began sanitising the premises last Saturday. Ms Kua also asked Early Childhood Development Agency on the need to temporarily close the school, however, the Agency said that there was no need at all to do such thing. “But we have to monitor the situation closely and to see what’s the next step,” she added.

TB is an infectious disease due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis bacterium that usually affects the lungs. It is the second greatest killer due to a single infectious agent worldwide, and in 2012, 1.3 million people died from the disease, with 8.6 million falling ill.

The MOH said that only a very small proportion of TB cases occur in children and last year, only 0.6 per cent of TB cases among Singapore residents occurred in those aged below 15.

TB is contagious, but it is not easy to catch. It is an airborne pathogen, meaning that the bacteria that cause TB can spread through the air from person to person. The chances of catching TB from someone you live or work with are much higher than from a stranger. Most people with active TB who have received appropriate treatment for at least two weeks are no longer contagious.

While latent TB is symptomless, the symptoms of active TB include the following:

  • Coughing, sometimes with mucus or blood.
  • Chills.
  • Fatigue.
  • Fever.
  • Loss of weight.
  • Loss of appetite.
  • Night sweats.

Tuberculosis usually affects the lungs, but can also affect other parts of the body. When TB occurs outside of the lungs, the symptoms can vary accordingly. Without treatment, TB can spread to other parts of the body through the bloodstream:

  • TB infecting the bones can lead to spinal pain and joint destruction.
  • TB infecting the brain can cause meningitis.
  • TB infecting the liver and kidneys can impair their waste filtration functions and lead to blood in the urine.
  • TB infecting the heart can impair the heart’s ability to pump blood, resulting in a condition called cardiac tamponade that can be fatal.

Earlier on June 16, MOH held a press conference and revealed that there were 6 cases of multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis (MDRTB) emerged from Ang Mo Kio Block 203, and the first case were found back in 2012. In its reply to a parliament question about the incident, was not able to provide any update to the reason of how the Ang Mo Kio tuberculosis (TB) cluster occured.

In a 2014 report by TodayOnline, it was reported that a group of researchers from National University of Singapore found that the proportion of TB cases involving non-residents increased from 25.5 per cent in 1995 to 28.9 per cent in 2004 and 47.7 per cent in 2011.

“An increasing trend of non-resident TB cases contributing to the overall proportion of TB cases over the years could suggest that mass immigration from high TB incidence countries is increasingly contributing to the burden of TB in recent years in Singapore,” noted the study, which cited India and China as some of the countries of origin of these non-residents.

But while non-resident TB cases contributed to the overall TB rates here, the researchers did not find a direct link between the increase in the foreign population and the risk of TB among local residents.

One of the researchers noted that foreign workers entering Singapore are already undergoing stricter checks for TB, with their X-rays sent to the STEP registry.

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Unapologetically Socialist – Goh Meng Seng (Part One)

In an hour-long interview National Solidarity Party secretary-general Goh Meng Seng shares…

抨击现有公共组屋政策 半辈子供房  最后一无所有

针对近期总理李显龙在国庆群众大会上,宣称将确保提供国人可负担的公共组屋、医疗服务和教育,让国人无需担心。 不过,在总理宣布了数项新政策后,仍令一些网民感到失望。 网民Calvin Goh认为现有公共住宅政策根本就不是“可负担”,我们几乎花大半辈子,把大部分积蓄花在上面,但是到最后,缺什么也不能传承给下一代。 “当你买下组屋并偿还房贷好些年,房子应该属于你的。但在新加坡,到最后房子却不属于你的。你只是偿还房租和长期住在那间组屋。供了这么多年房贷,但最后好多人还是一无所有,什么也不能传承给子孙后代。” 他提问:究竟新加坡属于谁的?国人的存在,是否就只是为了还房贷和贡献给政府?我们究竟是为了谁打拼? 公共住宅理应负担得起 我指的是公共组屋,或者公共住宅。至于私有产业不管是永久屋契还是租赁权,都属私人“拥有”,开放给本地或外国人购买(设定一些条规限定只有国人能购买土地财产),又或者较少法规限制。 他认为,建屋发展局的公共住宅,理应让民众负担得起或真正拥屋。但实际上只要看看售屋合同,就很明白所谓屋主其实都只是租户。 公共住宅理应让人民有瓦遮头,不应让国人对房屋产权有其他的猜测。“我不认为用20-40年偿还公共组屋房贷是可负担的。真正的可负担,指的是国人只需要数年时间,即5至10年就可清还所有房贷。” 如此,在清还房贷之后,国人才有余钱储蓄,或追求其他梦想。 但是,在现有制度下,国人几乎大部分收入都花在房贷,可是一旦屋契到期,价值归零。形同公积金一样,所有的价值只能看,却用不了。…

We don't want to meet Ngerng, say parents of children

No, we do not want to meet with Roy Ngerng. That was…