Dr. Eric Tayag, assistant health secretary and National Epidemiology Center (NEC) director, said the number of firecracker users went up 8 percent this year from 2012.
A total of 115 or 70 percent of the reported fireworks-related injuries were sustained by active users of firecrackers, according to the “Aksyon: Paputok Injury Reduction 2013” report of the DOH-NEC, which started recording cases on Dec. 21.
Mostly caused by piccolo
The DOH noted that fireworks-related injuries continued to increase in the days leading to the New Year as it recorded a total of 170 injuries as of 6 a.m., Saturday. Most of the injuries were caused by “piccolo,” a firecracker.
The number of recorded injuries was 167 in the same period last year.
Sixty-two percent or 101 cases of fireworks-related injuries were caused by piccolo, a banned firecracker.
Tayag urged the Philippine National Police to intensify its crackdown on piccolo and other illegal fireworks, saying the DOH received reports that the items were being openly sold near a police station in Pasay City.
Stray bullets
The DOH report also said that out of the 170 fireworks-related injuries, 78 cases or 46 percent occurred in Metro Manila, followed by 17 cases in Northern Mindanao.
There was one case of firecracker ingestion and five cases of stray bullet injury. No deaths were reported.
Most of the injured were males, 49 of whom were children under 10. Forty-nine were passive users or bystanders.
Boy’s right hand lost
One hundred forty-seven sustained blast injuries not requiring amputation and 16 suffered eye injuries. Two victims had blast injuries that needed amputation, the DOH said.
A 14-year-old boy who lost his right hand and an elderly man with a ruptured eyeball were among the worst injured so far, Tayag said.
He tweeted that a five-year-old boy had also lost his right index finger from using fireworks. /Inquirer