The Manila Times

The barangay should be the frontliner

- MA. LOURDES TIQUIA barangay tanod kagawad

have been set aside so that when crisis comes, they freeze and wait for the national government to tell them what to do, to give them money, to lead the way.

Risk management is the “process of identifyin­g, assessing and controling threats to an organizati­on’s capital and earnings. These threats or risks could stem from a wide variety of sources, including financial uncertaint­y, legal liabilitie­s, strategic management errors, accidents and natural disasters,” just like the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19). And almost all techniques in risk management is data-driven. Who among the local chief executives (LCEs) can bring their campaign maps and data on the table after winning and overlay plans, programs and activities? How many think in terms of numbers and getting the (villages) to be point of contact on the ground to aggregate those data at the center of governance? Very few and these few LCEs are so focused on the micro that they lose sight of the macro drivers.

Barangay are said to be the first contact point of any citizen, taxpayers or not, to government. It has been said, your impression of government is formed at the community level. They should know every household, every street corner and every business locator, among others. They know the supply chain in their locality, assuming they work and perform. In this Covid-19 situation, a pandemic, the frontline should have been the barangay and not the health workers because identifyin­g, contact-tracing, monitoring and investigat­ing are all tasks of barangay and that is not just the barangay captain, but the (village councilors), health workers and the (village police officers). So, why is it that since two weeks ago, the frontline became suddenly the hospitals?

Even the math tells us that Covid-19 could have been better managed via emergency triage at the barangay level, save for villages that are huge in terms of population. Clustering would have been the way to go. The controllin­g variable to Covid-19 is population density. The more populous a barangay, the higher the incidence of potential spread. And only data can tell you this, not anecdotal, so that the limited wherewitha­l can be used efficientl­y. Without data, as has been pointed out at the start of the quarantine, LCEs will just be looking for the “needle in a haystack,” using a shotgun approach to contain, a total waste.

There are 42,036 barangay nationwide, as per the 2015 census. The largest barangay in terms of population size is Barangay 176 in Caloocan City with 247,000 persons. It is followed by Commonweal­th (198,285) and Batasan Hills (161,409), both in Quezon City. Twelve other barangay posted a population size of more than a hundred thousand persons nationwide. According to the Department of Health’s website, there are 1,482 hospitals in the Philippine­s, 466 are public and 1,016 private. There are 23,013 barangay health stations and 2,590 rural health units. That alone should tell you a narrative not appreciate­d by many.

The hospitals need not be the first line. The hospitals should be the last line of defense if only barangay officials know what to do. There is no excuse because they have funding. They have had enough training from the investment given them in terms of disaster risk reduction and management and they know their terrain very well. There is still time to recover. Fighting an unknown enemy is hard, but if the fight is on the ground, at the trenches, the barangay should be able to mobilize and manage people and resources fast. Then we save the limited bed capacities of our strained health service system to better use as the last wall of defense.

Imagine if barangay are wired and act as the spokes of the hub ( city hall or capitol), there is cohesion, the supply chain is strengthen­ed and the logistics management of becoming battleread­y is enhanced. Imagine if you can use a barangay platform to pay your taxes at that level, get services at that point, community-based data is taken by household and everything is pushed to the city hall/provincial capital for strategic directions for plans, programs and activities. The barangay will play a much bigger role in jump-starting the local economy as we plan our way through the challenges and opportunit­ies of getting on our collective feet as a nation.

We have asked too much from our healthcare workers, about time the barangay step up. Why? Because we are just at the infancy of this pandemic’s trajectory and social (more like physical) distancing, though effective, has to reckon with transmissi­on dynamics at the nuclear level, the family. Each member of the family has to view it in terms of risk impact. If one person puts themselves at risk, everyone in the unit is at risk. As epidemiolo­gists put it, “any break in the chain breaks disease transmissi­on along that chain.”

The battle is just starting. What we do after April 14 defines how we will win the war. Let us do this together, in unison: family, community and as a nation.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines