Philippine Daily Inquirer

MOST PALAWAN FRONT-LINERS DECLINE CHINA JAB

- By Romar Miranda @RVMirandaI­NQ —WITH REPORTS FROM JOANNA ROSE AGLIBOT, CARMELA REYES-ESTROPE AND VILLAMOR VISAYA JR.

PUERTO PRINCESA CITY—Majority of the front-line medical workers in the government-run Ospital Ng Palawan (ONP) in this city refused to be vaccinated with the China-made CoronaVac and opted to wait for the arrival of the jab manufactur­ed by a British pharmaceut­ical company.

The vaccine made by the Beijing-based Sinovac Biotech Ltd. was made available to health workers in Palawan on Sunday but only 180 out of 698

ONP employees signed up for the free vaccinatio­n.

There was a higher number of “willing” individual­s to be inoculated with CoronaVac but most hospital workers “backed out” upon hearing news that the vaccine made by British-Swedish company AstraZenec­a would soon be available in the country.

“At first, there were more who were willing to be vaccinated. But when they learned that AstraZenec­a is coming, they backed out and we can’t force them to change their decision because this is supposed to be voluntary,” said ONP medical center chief Dr. Melecio Dy.

Dy, 58, was the first Palawan resident to be inoculated with the CoronaVac jab.

‘Wait and see’

Dy was confident that if those inoculated with Coronavac would not show adverse reactions, the number of hospital staffers willing to receive the vaccine would increase, citing the reluctant front-liners’ “wait and see attitude.”

Health Secretary Francisco Duque III earlier assured health workers who had declined the CoronaVac that they “won’t lose their prioritiza­tion” and they could get a share from the initial batch of AstraZenec­a jabs, which arrived in the country on Friday.

The Department of Health (DOH) has yet to announce detailed plans for the distributi­on of the 487,200 AstraZenec­a doses that made up the first delivery to the Philippine­s from COVAX, the global vaccine pool led by the World Health Organizati­on.

“There is no perfect vaccine, so if we have available vaccines, we should get it to prevent moderate to severe cases of COVID-19,” Dy added.

Thirty-two hospital staff, including seven doctors, 11 nurses, two medical technologi­sts, one dentist, and 11 nonmedical personnel that included clerks and security guards were vaccinated in ONP on Sunday.

ONP, which serves as the primary COVID-19 referral hospital in the province, was given 1,218 doses from the total of 5,260 Sinovac jabs allotted by the DOH for Palawan.

As of Sunday morning, there are only four remaining active COVID-19 cases in Palawan, out of 615 reported cases, with six deaths and 605 recoveries.

Last week, Bulacan Gov. Daniel Fernando said some of the health workers in the province also backed out of the initial inoculatio­n after learning that they would receive the Sinovac jabs.

But hospitals in the cities of Malolos, Olongapo and Tuguegarao proceeded with their vaccine rollout despite refusal of some front-liners to be inoculated with CoronaVac.

On Sunday, over 200 frontline health-care workers of James L. Gordon Memorial Hospital in Olongapo City and the Cagayan Valley Medical Center in Tuguegarao City received the CoronaVac jabs. Some 822 front-liners of Bulacan Medical Center in the City of Malolos were set to get their jabs on Monday.

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Robert Jaworski L. Abaño —ROMAR MIRANDA ?? FIRST IN LINE
Dr. Melecio Dy, medical chief of Ospital Ng Palawan in Puerto Princesa City, is the first resident of Palawan to receive the COVID-19 vaccine on Sunday.
Editor Robert Jaworski L. Abaño —ROMAR MIRANDA FIRST IN LINE Dr. Melecio Dy, medical chief of Ospital Ng Palawan in Puerto Princesa City, is the first resident of Palawan to receive the COVID-19 vaccine on Sunday.
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