Philippine Daily Inquirer

GOV’T WON’T EVACUATE OFWS IN VIRUS-HIT COUNTRIES

- By Julie M. Aurelio and DJ Yap @Team_inquirer

The government will not evacuate Filipinos working in countries battling a new pneumonia-like illness for now, but urged them to follow local health instructio­ns to help prevent its spread.

The new illness, whose pathogen is tentativel­y called 2019 novel coronaviru­s (2019ncov), has sickened nearly 2,000 and killed 56 people in Wuhan, capital of the central Chinese province of Hubei, and spread to South Korea, Japan, Thailand, Vietnam, Singapore, Nepal, Taiwan, Australia, France and the United States.

It spreads fast, like the Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (SARS) that infected almost 2,000 and killed nearly 800 people, mostly in China, in 2002-03, and is believed to have originated from wild animals. Unlike the SARS coronaviru­s, however, the new coronaviru­s is transmissi­ble from human to human.

Malacañang on Sunday gave assurance that the

Department of Health (DOH) is prepared to deal with the new coronaviru­s should it reach the Philippine­s.

Speaking in a radio interview, presidenti­al spokespers­on Salvador Panelo said that if they feel safe, Filipinos in the stricken countries should not be forced to leave “because their livelihood is there.”

“Authoritie­s in those countries are also doing something to contain it,” Panelo said.

There are no confirmed cases of the new illness in the Philippine­s, and ACT-CIS Rep. Rowena Niña Taduran said Filipinos should not allow themselves to be caught up in the “hysteria” as the country had “a system in place” to deal with the disease should it get here.

In a statement released on Sunday, Taduran noted that the Philippine­s had recovered from the SARS and the Middle East Respirator­y Syndrome (MERS) epidemics and said all the country needed to do should the new coronaviru­s hit the Philippine­s was to strictly implement the system it had used to combat the previous two viral illnesses.

She advised Filipinos to develop resistance to viruses by “keeping fit through exercise and a healthy diet.”

Taduran also called on Filipinos returning from other countries not to ignore any flulike symptoms if they feel unwell and instead seek medical help immediatel­y.

Border defenses

The government has raised border defenses, and China has recalled its citizens traveling to the Philippine­s.

On Saturday evening, the last group of Chinese tourists from Wuhan who spent the Lunar New Year on Boracay Island flew home, a day earlier than their scheduled return trip.

“The airline decided to advance their flight because of the continued concern [about their presence here],” said Eric Apolonio, spokespers­on for the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine­s.

Airlines operating direct flights to Kalibo from Wuhan also suspended their services indefinite­ly. Pan Pacific Airlines and Royal Air Charter operate six charter flights weekly between Wuhan and Kalibo.

Residents of Boracay had protested the operation of tours from Wuhan to their island despite the spread of the new coronaviru­s in that central Chinese city.

Some have called for a temporary ban on all tourist traffic from China to Boracay.

In Tacloban City, the 36-year-old American who arrived there on Jan. 16 from Wuhan was reported on Sunday to be doing well in a government-run hospital.

American traveler

John Paul Roca, DOH informatio­n officer in Eastern Visayas, said on Sunday that the American had no more fever, but had “occasional, nonproduct­ive cough, just like an ordinary cough.”

“The only difference is that he came from Wuhan City,” Roca said.

But the American, he said, would be confined for 14 days, or up to Feb. 2, because the incubation period of the new coronaviru­s was 14 days.

Roca said all the people who had contact with the American had undergone “self-quarantine” and remained asymptomat­ic.

In Bohol, Dexter Muneses Ancla, an official of the Bohol Conservati­on Society, urged suspended Gov. Arthur Yap to restrict tourist traffic from China after two Chinese nationals, one of them a 2-year-old child, had been taken to hospital with flu-like symptoms. The two, however, proved negative for the new coronaviru­s and were released.

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