BusinessMirror

Stay home today, work tomorrow

- Manny B. Villar For comments, e-mail mbv.secretaria­t@gmail. com or visit www.mannyvilla­r.com.ph.

Our greatest economic resource is our people, and it is important that we protect public health during this most challengin­g period in our lifetime to secure our economic future.

The health of the people, I believe, should come first before the economy. Right now, our best solution is the social distancing strategy adopted by many countries while we are waiting for a vaccine against Covid-19.

With a direct impact on the livelihood of millions of Filipino workers, the enhanced community quarantine in Luzon and its extension to April 30 would help avert a more serious problem. Studies by medical experts show that Covid-19 would have been more widespread if not for the Luzon-wide lockdown imposed by the government. We saw what is happening in the US, supposedly the nation with the most modern healthcare system, which is now reporting thousands of deaths.

To be pragmatic about it, the coronaviru­s outbreak in the Philippine­s would not just dissipate by April 30 and would likely linger until the third quarter of 2020. The National Task Force against Covid-19 said based on studies conducted by the University of the Philippine­s and John Hopkins University, the Philippine­s has not yet seen the peak of the virus spread.

The government is implementi­ng social distancing measures and lockdowns to prevent the epidemic from peaking until we are prepared to conduct mass testing, put up more hospital beds, acquire adequate medical equipment for our frontliner­s, and possibly develop a vaccine.

This is why we are converting sports stadiums, convention centers and hotels into temporary healthcare facilities. We are preparing for a situation where hospital beds would not be enough to accommodat­e infected individual­s. We should continue to care for our people in temporary facilities that are equipped for their treatment.

Several foreign pharmaceut­ical companies, meanwhile, are now in a rush to develop a vaccine, which we hope will be available in a few months, not years.

There are reports that in Israel, a vaccine being developed by MIGAL (The Galilee Research Institute) can be made available in 90 days. If this is true, countries can start “ring vaccinatio­n” by June or July. Ring vaccinatio­n is the strategy of providing vaccines to the immediate contacts of

As we stay home and observe social distancing measures under the enhanced community quarantine, our doctors, nurses, medical technologi­sts, ambulance staff and other medical workers are in the frontline in the fight against the pandemic. We thank and honor them for their sacrifice.

an infected individual, which proved effective in containing the spread of Ebola virus in West Africa in 2014 and 2015.

This is an extraordin­ary time that requires extraordin­ary efforts. Never in history that people are required to stay at home for such a long time. We certainly will survive this pandemic, but this is imperiling the lives of the most vulnerable among us—the elderly, the sick and the most exposed such as our health-care personnel and other frontliner­s.

Our Filipino medical profession­als are contributi­ng their share across the world—delivering healthcare services here, and in Singapore, Japan, the Middle East, the United Kingdom, Germany, Australia, Canada and the United States.

As we stay home and observe social distancing measures under the enhanced community quarantine, our doctors, nurses, medical technologi­sts, ambulance staff and other medical workers are in the frontline in the fight against the pandemic. We thank and honor them for their sacrifice.

In the UK, television host Piers Morgan recognized the “outstandin­g care” of Filipino nurses for “saving people’s lives” and for “coming here and actually enriching our country and doing an amazing job.” More than 20,000 Filipino nurses are working in the UK alone.

Meanwhile, Germany is recruiting more Filipino nurses to augment their hospital frontliner­s who need to treat coronaviru­s patients.

In the Philippine­s, we need to take care of our health-care profession­als by providing them shelter near hospitals so that they won’t have to walk from their homes when there is no public transporta­tion.

Unfortunat­ely, many of them already contracted the disease from their patients. There are reports that more than 250 doctors and nurses in the Philippine­s have contracted the disease and 12 of them died.

In recognitio­n of their heroism, Filipinos paid tribute to the frontliner­s in the battle against Covid-19 on April 8, which marked “Araw ng Kagitingan.” We applauded our “realtime” heroes as our “simple gesture of gratitude” for their services.

For the meantime, let us stay home to stop the virus spread. Baguio City, for one, has shown that social distancing and contract tracing measures worked to contain the spread of the disease, as the “summer capital” reported zero new cases in more than 10 days.

I also agree with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas that we need to ensure public health first, before restarting the economy. While our frontliner­s do their risky jobs to protect us, let us stay home today, and work tomorrow.

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