The Manila Times

Philanthro­pic architectu­re, planning and design for vaccinatio­n centers

-

observatio­ns and recommenda­tions during their scheduled vaccinatio­n. We gratefully appreciate this, and Palafox Associates and Palafox Architectu­re Group will be incorporat­ing their observatio­ns into the planning and design of vaccinatio­n centers, vaccinatio­n courts and drive-through vaccinatio­n sites.

Based on their observatio­ns and feedback, vaccinatio­n sites need architectu­ral designs and master plans for more efficient plans, layouts and circulatio­n for waste disposal, adverse effect monitoring, severe adverse event treatment, stable internet connection, a command center, setting up video orientatio­ns, standalone temperatur­e measuremen­t, hand sterilizat­ion areas, rest rooms and one-way flow, among others.

Waiting areas in the streets should be removed to allow for safer and more comfortabl­e waiting areas. Scheduling and encoding of informatio­n should be done online, not face-to-face. Walk-ins should be discourage­d. In addition, there have been many recommenda­tions for assigning more medical personnel to vaccinatio­n sites to avoid long waiting times and overcrowdi­ng. There have been instances wherein hundreds are scheduled for the day, but there is only one vaccinatio­n station on site. Assigning volunteers to augment the profession­al medical staff will also help remedy the staffing issues.

A vaccinatio­n site in a public school with a 5,000-square-meter campus can only vaccinate 300 to 400 persons per day. That can be improved to 3,000 a day with a good architectu­ral design and master plan, systematic processes, an efficient floor plan, and time and motion studies, among others. In Dubai, the vaccinatio­n process is only 15 minutes; in Toronto, it is 30 minutes; and in Arizona, it is 10 seconds in a drive-through vaccinatio­n site. Sadly, here in the Philippine­s, based on feedback we received, it takes 90 minutes to three hours. A doctor friend of mine told me that it took him five hours to be vaccinated and that other people waited in the open street for their turn, which can potentiall­y spread the virus. There was no digital infrastruc­ture to support the process; informatio­n was encoded on-site. There were only two vaccinator­s available and to think this is the time when senior citizens and health care workers were scheduled at the site. According to infectious disease specialist­s, vaccinatio­n centers should not be enclosed and are better without airconditi­oning. Outdoor sites with sheds are better because they have more natural light and ventilatio­n.

I hope we can adopt the Dubai experience, where vaccinatio­n centers are in shopping malls open to the public. They only have a maximum waiting time of 30 minutes. Those with scheduled vaccinatio­ns can shop and dine before and after being vaccinated. The underutili­zed road lanes and huge parking areas of malls can also be used as vaccinatio­n sites. Many vaccinatio­n centers now are in donated enclosed tents with no natural ventilatio­n and with the names of donors. I wonder if any medical practition­ers from the Department of Health or IATF are monitoring this substandar­d, unhealthy practice. With elections coming, there will be more enclosed tents with names of politician­s, and these will have no natural ventilatio­n and no efficient air exchange.

In Arizona, there is a drive-through vaccinatio­n facility with a full capacity of 12,000 vaccinatio­ns per day, but right now, it is handling an average of 8,000 and 9,000 vaccines per day with 10 lanes at the vaccinatio­n pod. The standard establishe­d is one vaccinatio­n for every 10 seconds. Half of the site is staffed by volunteers. One of their objectives is to get the site functionin­g successful­ly with as little help as possible from the military, so the systems they have establishe­d can be replicated in more counties. The success of this vaccinatio­n site was made possible through collaborat­ion between the Republican governor, the Department of Defense, planners, partners from health services, and numerous volunteers. This was gratefully appreciate­d and supported by the US President and Vice President who are both Democrats. Politics is set aside for the sake of ensuring an

efficient vaccinatio­n rollout.

I applaud the SM Group for their philanthro­pic initiative­s for humanity and their medical architectu­ral activism. They are volunteeri­ng their 75 SM malls as vaccinatio­n centers to local government units (LGUs) nationwide. They already started last March. Currently, they have 15 malls all throughout the Philippine­s that are now available for their multimall vaccinatio­n program, which they initiated in coordinati­on with LGUs. These prioritize the inoculatio­n of health workers, frontliner­s, senior citizens, and other priority groups identified by the government. It is estimated that approximat­ely 90,000 people can benefit from the vaccinatio­n program at SM malls.

I am glad to share that Palafox Associates and Palafox Architectu­re Group are currently designing a mega vaccinatio­n center with the capacity to vaccinate 10,000 persons per day, vaccinatio­n courts and drive-through vaccinatio­n sites based on global best practices. This is in coordinati­on with the philanthro­pic and patriotic initiative­s for country and humanity of Enrique Razon’s group — Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services, Michael

Ray Aquino, Solaire, Jocot de Dios’ Prime BMD, Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo-Puyat, the Nayong Pilipino Foundation, and Zuellig, among others. I believe if we streamline the process, we can achieve 1 vaccinatio­n every 15 minutes.

We can all contribute to achieve immunizati­on and vaccinatio­n through philanthro­pic architectu­re and medicine. Otherwise, it will take 10 years to vaccinate 70 percent of our population. The government cannot do it alone. This is an opportunit­y for the private sector to take part in medical architectu­ral philanthro­py for the country and humanity.

 ?? UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO MISSISSAUG­A WEBSITE ?? n A vaccinatio­n site at the University of Toronto Mississaug­a
UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO MISSISSAUG­A WEBSITE n A vaccinatio­n site at the University of Toronto Mississaug­a
 ?? AZ BIG MEDIA ?? n The drive-through vaccinatio­n site in Arizona has 24-hour continuous operations.
AZ BIG MEDIA n The drive-through vaccinatio­n site in Arizona has 24-hour continuous operations.
 ?? ABC7 NEWS ?? n The drive-through vaccinatio­n site in Arizona is located in the parking area of the State Farm Stadium.
ABC7 NEWS n The drive-through vaccinatio­n site in Arizona is located in the parking area of the State Farm Stadium.
 ??  ?? n Top view of layout of Ligtas Covid Center
n Top view of layout of Ligtas Covid Center

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines