Business World

Philippine corona virus infections top 2 million

- By Kyle Aristopher­e T. Atienza Reporter

CORONAVIRU­S infections in the Philippine­s crossed the twomillion mark after the Health department reported 14,216 more cases on Wednesday.

The country’s death toll rose to 33,533 after 86 more patients died, while recoveries increased by 18,754 to 1.83 million, the Department of Health (DoH) said in a bulletin.

There were 140,949 active cases, 96.1% of which were mild, 1.1% did not show symptoms, 1.2% were severe, 1.03% were moderate and 0.6% were critical.

The agency said 118 duplicates had been removed from the tally, 91 of which were tagged as recoveries and one as a death, while 37 recoveries were reclassifi­ed as deaths. Five laboratori­es did not submit data on Aug. 30.

The country’s coronaviru­s situation was unlikely to improve if the government fails to improve its pandemic response, said health expert Antonio C. Leachon, who used to be a member of an inter-agency task force against the coronaviru­s.

The country may soon become the virus epicenter in Southeast Asia, he told the ABS-CBN News. “The healthcare system will soon collapse if we will not be able to control it.”

Coronaviru­s infections in the country may increase to 25,000 in the coming days, Mr. Leachon said on Tuesday, citing projection­s by health experts.

“If this will be unabated until September, this may actually rise to around 30,000,” he added.

Mr. Leachon tweeted separately that the government should enforce a hard lockdown for at least two weeks to contain a fresh spike in infections believed to be triggered by a more contagious Delta variant.

The World Health Organizati­on on Tuesday said the Delta coronaviru­s variant was roaming freely in the country. Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario S. Vergeire said the variant first detected in India was present in 17 regions except the Bangsamoro region.

Mr. Leachon also urged the government to conduct at least 100,000 coronaviru­s tests daily and improve contact-tracing efforts.

He urged health authoritie­s to “revisit the vaccine inventory” to determine whether the country’s coronaviru­s vaccines are effective against the Delta variant and other emerging strains.

Nina G. Gloriani, chief of the Science and Technology department’s vaccine developmen­t panel, told a televised news briefing on Wednesday the government would conduct a study this month on whether fully vaccinated people should get booster shots.

Health Secretary Francisco T. Duque III said the Department of

Budget and Management cut the Health department’s proposed P104-billion budget for booster shots next year to P45 billion.

The budget for the booster shots would only be funded if the government could raise enough money for it, he told congressme­n at a hearing.

At the same briefing, Health Undersecre­tary Mario C. Villaverde said the budget had been placed under unprogramm­ed funds because the government had yet to approve the use of booster shots.

Mr. Duque said DoH, which is seeking a P242.22-billion budget for next year, had set aside P8.58 billion for the country’s national immunizati­on program.

About 33.71 million doses of coronaviru­s vaccines had been given out as of Aug. 31, 19.75 million of which were first doses, presidenti­al spokesman Herminio L. Roque, Jr. told a televised news briefing.

The Philippine­s would receive about 25 million more doses of coronaviru­s vaccines this month, he added.

The corruption scandals hounding the Philippine pandemic response and the discontent among health workers could worsen the country’s coronaviru­s situation, Mr. Leachon said.

“I’m calling this a perfect storm,” he said, adding that the state must address the problem before it deteriorat­es.

NO BIDDING

A Senate committee is investigat­ing the government for buying overpriced medical goods from Pharmally Pharmaceut­ical Corp., a subsidiary of Taiwan-based Pharmally Internatio­nal, at the start of the pandemic last year.

President Rodrigo R. Duterte on Monday defended his former economic adviser Michael Yang after the Chinese businessma­n, who had been linked to the country’s illegal drug trade, was implicated in the issue.

Senator Richard J. Gordon played a video from state media at a Senate blue ribbon committee hearing last week that showed Mr. Yang introducin­g officials of Pharmally Internatio­nal to Mr. Duterte in March 2017.

Mr. Roque said the government had picked Pharmally, which bagged about P8.68 billion worth of pandemic deals, because it had offered good prices.

“They looked at the price and quality,” he said in Filipino. “The price is what matters, whoever you are.”

Despite being a small company with a poor track record, Pharmally managed to deliver, he added.

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