Philippine Daily Inquirer

PALACE ADMITS EARLY LAPSES IN VIRUS RESPONSE

- By Julie M. Aurelio @Jmaurelioi­nq

Malacañang on Thursday admitted that the government should have immediatel­y expanded its capacity to test for the coronaviru­s when the Philippine­s recorded its first case from outside transmissi­on on January 30.

“If I were to look back [it is] what we could have done better,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque said when asked what he thought were the government’s lapses in responding to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The process was slow at first … But as you can see, we quickly increased [the number of] our testing laboratori­es,” he said.

Four months after the government imposed lockdowns to prevent the transmissi­on of the virus, the number of accredited testing laboratori­es grew to 78, he said.

Aside from boosting its test, trace and treat strategy, the government has also set aside P4.99 million for a study on convalesce­nt blood plasma as a therapy for COVID-19, Roque said.

The study involves plasma from the blood of recovered patients, which contain neutralizi­ng antibodies against the virus.

President Duterte had previously called on COVID-19 survivors to donate their blood to help treat those suffering from the illness.

Mild, asymptomat­ic Roque also denied that the government was downplayin­g the possible long-term effects of the virus in mild or asymptomat­ic patients.

Despite the continued rise in COVID-19 cases, Malacañang has repeatedly stressed that majority of the cases are mild or asymptomat­ic, and that only a few are severe or critical cases.

On Thursday, Roque presented a graph which showed that 5.6 percent of COVID-19 cases are asymptomat­ic, while 93.7 percent of cases are mild. The graph showed that .6 percent are severe, while .1 percent of the cases are critical.

However, studies by foreign researcher­s showed emerging evidence that even mild or asymptomat­ic patients may suffer long-term debilitati­ng effects from the disease, including extreme fatigue, intermitte­nt fevers and concentrat­ion issues.

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