The Philippine Star

COVID test sought for medical frontliner­s

- – Sheila Crisostomo, Janvic Mateo

Nurses and other medical frontliner­s who are considered as persons under investigat­ion (PUIs) should be tested for coronaviru­s disease 2019 or COVID-19, Sen. Bong Go said on Monday.

“Let us give considerat­ion to the nurses who are PUIs given their critical role in defeating COVID-19. We should look after them because they are the ones taking care of the patients,” Go, who chairs the Senate committee on health and demography, said.

“They are at high risk of contractin­g the virus because they are exposed to COVID-19 patients. We need to know if they are negative or positive for the disease to avoid unnecessar­y quarantine. We need as many nurses as we can get right now,” he added.

Go backed the call of Philippine Nurses Associatio­n national president Rosie de Leon to prioritize nurses in COVID testing.

He also reiterated his call for the Department of Health (DOH) to accredit more laboratori­es to perform COVID-19 testing and for the Food and Drug Administra­tion to hasten the process of approving applicatio­ns of testing kits.

Testing centers

To speed up the testing for coronaviru­s, the DOH is looking to accredit 49 facilities and laboratori­es as COVID-19 testing centers, DOH Secretary Francisco Duque III said yesterday.

Duque said the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM), which is the country’s primary referral center for COVID-19, is screening the capability of the laboratori­es to do the testing.

“One of the DOH’s strategies to combat COVID-19 is to enhance and expand our country’s testing capabiliti­es,” he said.

Of the number, only the Lung Center of the Philippine­s (LCP) passed Stage 4 (proficienc­y testing) out of the five-stage accreditat­ion steps of the DOH.

This means that the LCP laboratory may accept COVID-19 samples, but will need to test five positive samples as confirmed by RITM before proceeding to a full scale implementa­tion.

Five facilities are in Stage 3 (personnel training), which means that their personnel who will operate the laboratory will have to undergo a special three-day training at the RITM.

These are Western Visayas Medical Center, Bicol Public Health Laboratory, Victoriano Luna Hospital, St. Luke’s Medical Center-BGC and St. Luke’s Medical Center-QC.

Thirteen facilities are in Stage 2 (validation). This means that a team from the DOH, RITM and World Health Organizati­on will conduct onsite visits to check the correctnes­s of their self-assessment and inform the laboratori­es of their deficienci­es.

These are Makati Medical Center, Eastern Visayas Regional Medical Center, National Kidney and Transplant Institute, Philippine Genome Center (UP Diliman), Corazon Locsin Monteliban­o Memorial Regional Hospital, Governor

Celestino Gallares Memorial Medical Center, Molecular Diagnostic­s Laboratory, Cotabato Regional Medical Center, The Medical City, Amang Rodriguez Memorial Medical Center, Marikina City health office, Chinese General Hospital and American Bio-Clinical Laboratori­es Internatio­nal.

RITM director Celia Carlos assured the public that they are implementi­ng the “firstin, first-out” policy in testing samples sent to the facility.

“We do not screen who should undergo testing or not. It is within the discretion of the attending doctor to order the test,” Carlos said.

The field validation of the test kits developed by Filipino scientists will be completed today, according to Science Secretary Fortunato dela Peña.

Dela Peña said the Food and Drug Administra­tion is expected to issue a certificat­e of product registrati­on on Friday for the locally developed test kits for COVID-19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines