BusinessMirror

Lawmakers cite law allowing LGUS to procure Covid-19 booster shots

- Claudeth Mocon-ciriaco

ASENATOR and member of the House of Representa­tives on Wednesday said that the Vaccinatio­n Act of 2021 allows the private sector and local government units (LGUS) to procure booster shots to address the growing clamor for added protection amid the emergence of Covid-19 variants and waning efficacy of vaccines.

This was shared by Sen. Nancy Binay and Iloilo Rep. Janette Garin at the Kapihan sa Manila Bay virtual forum on Wednesday.

“For the purchase of booster shots, it can already be covered by the Vaccinatio­n Act that we passed; it falls within the vaccinatio­n program,” Binay said in Filipino when asked if there’s still a need to pass another law that will allow the private sector and LGUS to purchase vaccines for booster.

For her part, Garin noted that the government should now be considerin­g various options to give the country flexibilit­y in stopping the spread of Covid, especially breakthrou­gh infections, affecting those that were already fully vaccinated as early as March.

Garin noted that administer­ing booster shots is the direction being taken by the United States and several European and Middle Eastern countries, with the vaccine manufactur­ers themselves recognizin­g the waning protection accorded by their Covid shots.

“There is such a thing as Mature Regulatory Agencies with actual trials already for booster shots. If Pfizer already has full authorizat­ion from the US Food and Drug Administra­tion [FDA], this can be used as basis of the Philippine FDA to give access to the LGUS and also the private sector. The Department of Health [DOH] can serve as the consolidat­or,” Garin explained.

It may be noted that Section 5 of Republic Act (RA) 11525 (Vaccinatio­n Act of 2021) states that the private sector may purchase vaccines in cooperatio­n with the DOH and the National Task Force (NTF) against Covid-19. Vaccines bought by private entities, under the law, shall be for their exclusive use, with the priorities being the health-care workers, senior citizens, economic frontliner­s, and essential personnel.

“I would understand the private sector’s need for booster shots. In their workplaces, even if everyone had been vaccinated, if one becomes positive, the infection will spread and the work will stop, so it is killing them, especially the small companies. This is why they need to buy vaccines for booster shots,” Garin said.

Sinovac, she pointed out, has admitted that the immunity it provides wanes after six months, while Pfizer said there is a need for a third shot after the eighth month from the second dose.

“The mere fact that the US is administer­ing third shot is already an admission of the waning effect of the vaccine. Israel has reached 2 million people already [for the booster shots] and they saw drastic reduction in cases,” Garin said adding, “With Delta surprise, vaccinatio­n could be our considerat­ion for the bubble but only if there is third dose.”

She also said the government should not be swayed by the World Health Organizati­on’s (WHO) guidance against the administra­tion of booster shots.

“We are a small country. [The volume of] our third shot for health-care workers and persons with comorbidit­y is small. This is survival mode and the responsibi­lity of our government is not to the WHO but to our people,” Garin said.

“We should all act with a sense of urgency,” she stressed.

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