Last updated: 16 Jun 2026 | 13 Views |
A true-to-life story from a suburban condominium construction site, where pools of rainwater, open water tanks, and muddy puddles became breeding grounds for millions of Aedes mosquitoes, until the fear of the birth-defect-causing Zika virus became a crisis the site safety officer had to solve before it was too late.
On the morning of May 8, 2025, Thanakorn Saengphet, the professional safety officer at an eight-story condominium construction site in the Bang Bua Thong area, made his usual rounds of the worker camp. Heavy rain had fallen for three straight nights. The un-poured ground had turned into more than a dozen scattered pools of standing water. Cement-mixing barrels and open 200-liter plastic drums were brimming with clear rainwater, and when he leaned in to look, his heart sank. Countless mosquito larvae wriggled across the surface of every container.
This camp housed more than 60 workers, many of whom had brought their wives and small children to live with them. Among them was Mayuree, the wife of a steel fixer, who was five months pregnant. She sat washing clothes in front of a temporary plywood room, her arms and legs dotted with red mosquito bites. Every evening the sound of slapping at mosquitoes echoed through the camp. The Aedes mosquitoes swarmed from dusk, and not a single one of the temporary quarters had a window screen.
Thanakorn knew that the rainy season was the season of the Aedes mosquito, and that this mosquito carried far more than dengue. It is also a vector for the Zika virus, which is extremely dangerous to pregnant women. He had read that if a pregnant woman is infected with Zika, the virus can cross the placenta to the baby, causing microcephaly (an abnormally small head), incomplete brain development, and other birth defects. The thought that Mayuree and her unborn child might be at this risk kept him awake at night.
Many people think the Aedes mosquito is only about dengue, but the more frightening truth is that the very same mosquito (Aedes aegypti) is a vector for dengue, chikungunya, and Zika alike. A Zika infection in an average adult may cause only mild symptoms such as low fever, rash, red eyes, or joint pain, so mild that many never realize they are infected. But for a pregnant woman, it can be a catastrophe.
The World Health Organization states clearly that Zika infection during pregnancy is a cause of Congenital Zika Syndrome, which includes microcephaly, brain abnormalities, vision and hearing impairment, and lifelong developmental delays. These disabilities cannot be cured. For a low-income construction worker's family, this is not merely an illness but a lifelong burden that can devastate the entire family.
Worse still, in a crowded camp, if one worker becomes infected with Zika or dengue, local mosquitoes will bite that person and carry the virus to others, sparking a cluster outbreak with frightening speed. Sick workers must stop working, construction is delayed, the project owner suffers losses, and above all, the lives and health of these people hang in the balance.
"I'm responsible for the safety of everyone on this site, but the enemy I fear most right now isn't a collapsing scaffold or a falling object. It's a tiny mosquito that could destroy the future of a child not yet born," Thanakorn said.
As an employer and safety supervisor, there is also a legal duty of care for the health and safety of employees and camp residents. Allowing mosquito breeding sites to spread is therefore not only a humanitarian concern but an unavoidable responsibility.
Thanakorn tried every method he could think of, but the problem on an actively operating construction site proved more complex than expected.
He realized that scattered, piecemeal fixes would never be enough. What was needed was professional, comprehensive management that tackles both larvae and adult mosquitoes across the entire site at once.
After searching for a solution, Thanakorn contacted World Health Disinfection (WHD), a full-service provider of mosquito elimination and disease-vector control. The WHD team surveyed the site the very next day and built a plan that addressed every problem Thanakorn faced.
Larvae filled the water tanks and pools. Aedes mosquitoes swarmed from early evening. Workers were bitten day and night. Mayuree had to hide in a stifling hot room out of fear of mosquitoes. Thanakorn lost sleep worrying about Zika, and two workers had already developed fevers and had to stop working.
Within one week of mosquito spraying and larviciding, mosquito numbers dropped dramatically. The larvae in the tanks were gone, workers slept better, no further workers fell ill, and most importantly, Mayuree could live in the camp with peace of mind. The risk to her unborn child had been greatly reduced.
"I'm so relieved. Now when I walk the camp I don't see a single larva in the water tanks anymore. The workers sleep better and no longer complain about mosquitoes. Most importantly, Mayuree and her baby are safe. The WHD team didn't just spray and leave. They walked every corner, taught us how to manage the water tanks, and scheduled a follow-up visit. I'd recommend this service to every construction site that has standing water." Thanakorn Saengphet, Professional Safety Officer
If your site or camp has standing water, open water tanks, and pregnant women or small children living there, don't let Aedes mosquitoes become the silent threat to their future. Let WHD handle it with comprehensive mosquito spraying and larviciding.
See the Mosquito Spray Service and Pricing, Click HereCall now 065-556-6294 or add us on LINE: @whd268
1. Is WHD's mosquito spray service safe for pregnant women and small children?
Yes. The team uses certified products and advises vulnerable groups to avoid the area during spraying and for a short period afterward, per guidance, for maximum safety.
2. Why eliminate larvae too? Isn't spraying adult mosquitoes enough?
It is not enough. If larvae in water tanks and pools are not addressed, new mosquitoes keep hatching. Eliminating both larvae and adults at once truly breaks the cycle.
3. Can you spray a site that is still operating?
Yes. The team schedules spraying to suit your operations, such as evenings or off-hours, so construction is not disrupted.
4. How often is spraying needed?
It depends on site conditions and season. Generally, during the rainy season, regular rounds are recommended to cut the cycle of new mosquitoes. The team will assess and advise the right schedule.
5. How does Zika harm the baby?
If a pregnant woman is infected with Zika, the virus can cross the placenta to the baby, causing microcephaly, brain abnormalities, and incurable birth defects. That is why prevention at the source, the Aedes mosquito, is essential.
6. How do I get a quote?
Call 065-556-6294 or LINE @whd268. The team is ready to survey and quote based on your area's size.
#MosquitoSpray #Zika #MosquitoControl #MosquitoFreeConstructionCamp #MosquitoSprayService
Mosquito spray service, Aedes mosquito control, Zika and dengue prevention for construction camps and standing-water areas, by World Health Disinfection.