The Philippine Star

Gov’t wants vaccines declared as state assets

- By PAOLO ROMERO

The government wants Congress to immediatel­y pass a law that will declare COVID-19 vaccines as state assets to ensure control over the supply of serums amid the scramble among local government units (LGUs) and private companies to secure doses for their constituen­ts and workers.

Officials of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) – at the resumption of the Senate inquiry into the government’s mass vaccinatio­n plan – sought the immediate passage of a measure that would make it easy for the government to import and distribute vaccine doses.

Vaccine czar Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. said the measure could also include allocation for an indemnific­ation fund for vaccinees who may suffer from adverse effects as all COVID-19 vaccines are still in phase 3 trials.

“We hope we could enact a law urgently needed for the COVAX vaccinatio­n of 20 percent of our population… to declare COVID-19 vaccines as state assets for strict government control,” Galvez told the specially convened committee of the whole chaired by

Senate President Vicente Sotto III.

The official was referring to the World Health Organizati­on (WHO)’s initiative of pooling vaccine resources to ensure equitable distributi­on. The Philippine­s is expected to obtain some 44 million doses of vaccines for 22 million Filipinos for free from the COVAX facility.

Galvez told the hearing the initial batch of vaccines from COVAX would likely be from Pfizer.

He also asked that Congress, through the bill, allow LGUs to make advance market payments to vaccine manufactur­ers as the country’s procuremen­t law prohibits them to do so when the specified prices as well as delivery dates are not set.

He said the bill should also exempt all vaccine procuremen­ts from all taxes and customs duties so that doses could be released immediatel­y from ports and distribute­d as quickly as possible to ensure their efficacy.

Most vaccines require below freezing temperatur­es for transport and storage, including Pfizer’s, which have to be stored at -70 degrees Celsius.

The IATF’s move to bar LGUs and the private sector from directly procuring vaccines has been one of the most debated issues in the last three hearings of the committee.

Senators warned that the national government’s monopolizi­ng the procuremen­t of vaccines was a deadly form of red tape as COVID-19 kills some 25 Filipinos every day.

The delay in the vaccinatio­n rollout is also delaying the country’s economic recovery as foreign rating agencies have warned, senators pointed out.

Some LGUs with financial resources, like Quezon City, Manila and Las Piñas City, have already forged agreements for the procuremen­t of vaccines.

Galvez and IATF chairman Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, however, stressed that as no vaccine has obtained full commercial clearance but only emergency use authorizat­ion (EUA), the national government must intervene through tripartite agreements with vaccine maker and with LGUs or the private sector that seek to procure the injections.

The officials also said there is a need for accountabi­lity as well as tracking after the vaccines are injected.

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