Last updated: 10 Jun 2026 | 56 Views |
When public lives are the mission, choosing equipment that is spec-compliant, durable, and actually works is the heart of disease control.
On a Monday morning in mid-July, a district administrative officer (name withheld) read the report from the local health-promoting hospital with trembling hands. Dengue cases in the sub-district had jumped from 4 to 23 in two weeks, and a nine-year-old boy had been transferred to the provincial ICU with Dengue Shock Syndrome.
The mayor called, his voice tense: our fogging machine, bought three years ago, will not start anymore. The mechanic says the piston is worn and the carburetor is clogged, and there are no spare parts. Our team has to borrow a unit from the next sub-district, and the queue is a week long. Residents are complaining on our Facebook page that we work too slowly and let their children fall sick.
The officer knew the problem was not a lazy team. It was cheap equipment purchased on lowest-price-only criteria, with no attention to durability specs. When the crisis demanded heavy continuous use, the machine failed, becoming a piece of equipment parked uselessly in the supply room while public budget went to waste.
Dengue is not a new disease, but a silent threat that the Department of Disease Control warns about every rainy season. A single Aedes aegypti mosquito can lay hundreds of eggs in tiny pools of standing water, and the eggs survive dry spells for months. Disease control must therefore be fast, comprehensive, and continuous. Fog even three to five days late and the outbreak cycle expands beyond control.
In reality, many local agencies face the same recurring obstacles:
The consequence is not just rising case numbers but lost public trust, criticism on social media, and questions from the local council about whether the equipment budget was worthwhile.
The ULV SOLO PORT423 backpack fogger is made in Germany and engineered specifically for disease control and pest elimination in public spaces. With the latest SOLO engine and premium components from MAHLE and BING, this is not just another fogger, it is equipment built to work hard in real crises.
Before: Cheap foggers that would not start, a few households treated per day, coarse mist falling to the ground, mosquitoes everywhere, cases climbing, residents complaining, a demoralized team.
After: Crews covered every household in half the time, fine mist reaching every corner, mosquito numbers plummeting, new cases halted within two weeks, and residents praising the agency proactive work online.
Since our municipality switched to the SOLO PORT423, dengue-control fogging is a different job. It starts every time, sprays far, and the team is not worn out like before. Best of all, three rainy seasons later the machine still runs at 100% with no repairs. Excellent value for the budget.
— Head of Public Health, a municipal sub-district
For procurement officers and local executives, writing a Terms of Reference (TOR) that delivers a truly durable machine means specifying: a ULV droplet size under 30 microns, a spray range of at least 12 meters, a chemical tank of at least 12 liters, an engine with in-country service and parts support, and a weight suited to continuous backpack operation. Specifying durability and after-sales service rather than lowest price alone ensures the agency gets equipment that works in the field and stays cost-effective across its full service life.
The World Health Disinfection team is ready to advise on specifications, prepare government quotations, and provide product certification documents so your procurement process is correct and transparent.
See the SOLO PORT423 ULV fogger product and pricing click here
Call our team: 065-556-6294
LINE: @whd268
Q: Can the SOLO PORT423 spray both disinfectant and mosquito-control liquids?
A: Yes. The ULV system handles both disinfectants and pest-control liquids as the agency specifies, one versatile asset for many missions.
Q: What size of agency is it suited for?
A: Ideal for sub-district and municipal administrations, provincial administrations, hospitals, schools, and any agency managing medium-to-large public areas.
Q: Are documents available for government procurement?
A: Yes, quotations, certifications, and equipment specifications. Contact the team at 065-556-6294.
Learn more about dengue from the Department of Disease Control, Ministry of Public Health and vector-control guidance from the World Health Organization (WHO), and explore other equipment and services at World Health Disinfection.
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