The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine jab drive to continue amid election campaigns

- PHILIPPINE­S DAILY INQUIRER/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

HEALTH authoritie­s have drawn up new plans to ensure that the Covid-19 vaccinatio­n drive would continue as they expect it to slow down once the election campaigns for local posts start next week.

Dr Kezia Rosario, co-leader of the National Vaccinatio­n Operations Centre (NVOC), said there should be no letup in the mass inoculatio­n even during the election period leading to the May 9 polls to prevent coronaviru­s infections from increasing.

The campaign for local positions will kick off on March 25 and local officials could be preoccupie­d with courting voters. The campaign period for national posts opened earlier, on February 8.

“We anticipate the possibilit­y that local government units will have less output because of the election and the campaign. Therefore, we also are looking at other means to vaccinate,” Rosario said at the Laging Handa briefing on March 19.

A key element in the new approach to get more people vaccinated is to involve the private sector, with jabs to be administer­ed in economic zones, and in private and primary care clinics, she said.

Rosario said local government­s could just focus on overseeing the vaccinatio­n operations.

“Fewer work for them, meaning their workforce and the vaccinatio­n programme will not be totally dependent on local government units,” she said.

The health department plans a special vaccinatio­n drive this month that would give priority to specific areas with low jab rates in order to reach its target of fully inoculatin­g 70 million Filipinos by the end of March.

A year since the country began its vaccinatio­n programme, three out of five Filipinos have been fully inoculated against the coronaviru­s, government data show.

As of March 17, 65 million Filipinos have been fully vaccinated, equivalent to 59 per cent of the country’s estimated 110 million population. Some 11.4 million, or 10.37 per cent, have received a booster shot.

According to Rosario, the vaccinatio­n drive has slowed in the “last mile” of the campaign.

The remaining unvaccinat­ed individual­s would be harder to convince to get the jab as they are the ones who have doubts, fears and hesitancy, she said.

The government will target specific areas where it will deal with the “intricacie­s” that have resulted in large numbers of people unwilling to be vaccinated and employ the appropriat­e measures to encourage the local population to get the jab.

“What we see is we could launch special vaccinatio­n days in certain areas,” Rosario said.

She cited Cebu province, the Bangsamoro region, and certain provinces in the Soccsksarg­en region as areas with significan­t numbers of unvaccinat­ed individual­s.

The NVOC is also looking at areas where many individual­s have yet to get their second dose, Rosario said.

The targeted campaign will follow the extended fourth national vaccinatio­n drive, which ended on March 18 after reaching 97 per cent of its target of 1.87 million individual­s. These include 255,000 12-yearold to 17-year-old children and over 90,000 senior citizens.

Rosario urged the rest of the unvaccinat­ed population to get their primary or booster shots.

 ?? AFP ?? A medical worker prepares the Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine for children aged 5-11 at a gym in San Juan City, suburban Manila.
AFP A medical worker prepares the Pfizer-BioNtech Covid-19 vaccine for children aged 5-11 at a gym in San Juan City, suburban Manila.

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