The Philippine Star

DOH claims small victory vs COVID

- By SHEILA CRISOSTOMO

The Department of Health (DOH) yesterday said it had achieved a “small victory” in the fight against the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19).

In a press conference, DOH Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said the country’s response against COVID-19 is gaining ground, based on three indicators: the deaths or case fatality rate (CFR), case doubling time and critical care utilizatio­n rate.

“Fewer people are dying of COVID-19… The case doubling time is also getting longer in the country. And because we were able to bring down (these indicators), it means a small victory for us,” Vergeire said.

She noted that the downward trend shows that the “health system now has enough time to breathe” as indicators

“provide a clearer picture of the COVID-19 situation in the country.”

Yesterday, the DOH reported that the number of confirmed cases soared to 18,638 with 552 new cases recorded. Of the new cases, 119 are “fresh cases” while 433 are “late cases.”

The number of fatalities rose to 960, with three new deaths reported, while the number of recoveries reached 3,979 with 70 patients overcoming the virus.

Vergeire said mortality from COVID-19 has been declining since late March, indicating that the healthcare sector’s treatment of the illness “has been progressiv­ely improving.”

On the other hand, the case doubling time of three to four days in the past months has been prolonged to the current 6.29 days in Metro Manila.

Vergeire said the critical utilizatio­n rate has not been maximized, indicating that the health system is not yet overwhelme­d.

The critical care utilizatio­n rate is a figure that indicates the capacity of the healthcare system to handle severe cases, as seen in how much of the intensive care (ICU) facilities is used and how much is available for use.

DOH data show that 34 percent of ICU beds are unoccupied while 18 percent of mechanical ventilator­s are available.

Senators fear underrepor­ting

Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon questioned yesterday the basis of the DOH for disaggrega­ting cases in the reporting of confirmed coronaviru­s disease 2019 patients even as he expressed fears that the agency may have been underrepor­ting COVID-19 cases all along.

“What is the basis for disaggrega­ting cases and how does that affect our interpreta­tion of flattening of the curve? Has the inter-agency task force (IATF) considered these figures in its decision to shift to general community quarantine (GCQ)?” Drilon asked in a statement.

He said there are several complaints not only from the public but also from laboratori­es themselves who are confused with the new classifica­tion of cases into “fresh” and “late” cases.

DOH reported on Sunday 862 new infections, 16 fresh cases and 846 late cases bringing the total to 18,086.

“If the DOH could not provide logical explanatio­ns for this, except for putting the blame on laboratori­es, then there is a reason to believe that it is underrepor­ting COVID-19 cases. That is not only counterpro­ductive because hiding the real data could be fatal,” he said.

The senator cited the difference­s between the way South Korea and China reported their COVID-19 cases. He said the government may learn a thing or two about transparen­cy in the way South Korea and China handle the pandemic.

Meanwhile, Senate President Vicente Sotto III pressed Health Secretary Francisco Duque III to temporaril­y set aside the planned hiring of contact tracers as an added measure to control the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

Sotto said the DOH should instead use the P11.7-billion budget for the hiring of 130,000 contact tracers for the treatment of persons afflicted with COVID-19.

“It will be wiser and more practical to divert the P11.7 billion for the treatment of patients. We need funds to treat our sick countrymen. It’s more important to use this fund to buy medicines and medical equipment to help heal our patients,” he said.

“What I am suggesting is for the DOH to be more prudent on how the country’s funds are being used. But of course, the decision is still with the President,” he said.

He said the DOH contact tracing can only be effective if the people are trained in investigat­ion.

If the DOH hires people who have no experience in investigat­ion, then the program is practicall­y useless, he said.

“The people they will hire will just ask black and white questions and get answers that will not yield the needed informatio­n to help the government track down people who might have been contaminat­ed by the virus,” Sotto said.

DOH assures transparen­cy

A DOH official gave assurance yesterday that it has been transparen­t with coronaviru­s disease data and department records have been open to public scrutiny. In a press conference, Undersecre­tary Vergeire noted the agency has been open with its data which are even accessible in data-drop, website and other platforms. “We have been transparen­t with our data from the very start. You can see everything that we do, we have an open system – the data drop, where in the public can see our data,” she added. The official has made the assurance as some legislator­s are questionin­g the new format of the DOH daily bulletin for COVID-19 which now shows a rising trend in the number of confirmed cases.

But according to Vergeire, the rise in cases is due to the automation of their system with the use of COVIDKAYA, an applicatio­n that automates the data collection platform from testing laboratori­es to DOH for validation of the findings.

 ?? Geremy Pintolo ?? A guard in Intramuros checks people who pass through the walled city’s premises yesterday on the first day of the general community quarantine.
Geremy Pintolo A guard in Intramuros checks people who pass through the walled city’s premises yesterday on the first day of the general community quarantine.

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