The Jerusalem Post

Israeli health team in Philippine­s to assist in COVID vaccinatio­n rollout

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

A team of three Israeli health experts arrived in the Philippine­s on Sunday to assist the island nation in its COVID-19 vaccine rollout.

“On behalf of the Philippine government, I wish to thank the Israeli government for sending this mission, and the members of the medical team for their generosity in taking part in this mission to share their expertise in ensuring the success in combating coronaviru­s and the vaccinatio­n program in the Philippine­s,” Philippine Ambassador to Israel Macairog S. Alberto said in a statement on Saturday. “Truly, Israel is a dear friend, ready to always lend a helping hand.”

Three doctors are on the mission: Avraham Ben Zaken, deputy director of medical technologi­es and infrastruc­ture developmen­t at Sourasky Medical Center in Tel Aviv; Dafna Segol, senior strategic planner of the Health Ministry’s COVID-19 control center; and Adam Segal, logistics and operations manager at SLE, a Teva Pharmaceut­icals subsidiary.

The team was welcomed at Ninoy Aquino Internatio­nal Airport in Manila by National Task Force Against COVID-19 chief implemente­r Carlito Galvez Jr., local media reported.

The Israeli health profession­als will assist with the vaccine rollout strategy, including safe handling and how to address vaccine hesitancy and the gradual transition to less-stringent quarantine restrictio­ns, he said.

“Their arrival in the Philippine­s will help us fine-tune our vaccinatio­n rollout,” Galvez said in a statement published by Inquirer. net, a Philippine news site. “We want to learn from the best practices being implemente­d in Israel and hopefully, replicate and use them in crafting our country’s policies.”

The Philippine government on Sunday said it had purchased 40 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine, which are slated to arrive in September. It has also ordered doses of China’s Sinovac, Russia’s

Sputnik V, the US’s Moderna and Britain’s AstraZenec­a vaccine, it said.

About a third of Filipinos are willing to be vaccinated, according to a noncommiss­ioned Social Weather Survey taken from April 28 to May 2. Vaccinatin­g the majority of the adult population by the end of the year is a priority,

the Philippine government has said.

So far, some eight million vaccine doses have been administer­ed, according to Reuters data – less than 4% of the population of some 106 million.

The Israeli team is expected to stay in the Philippine­s through June 25.

 ?? (Lisa Marie David/Reuters) ?? A MEDICAL TECHNICIAN administer­s a coronaviru­s vaccine in near Manila earlier this month.
(Lisa Marie David/Reuters) A MEDICAL TECHNICIAN administer­s a coronaviru­s vaccine in near Manila earlier this month.

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