Philippine Daily Inquirer

In Cordillera, medics brace for worst COVID-19 cases

Local government­s tapped to help medical teams; Laguna festival called off amid virus jitters

- Hospital in Bokod town, also in Benguet. —VINCENT CABREZA, KIMBERLIE QUITASOL, KARLSTON LAPNITEN AND MARICAR CINCO

BAGUIO City—emergency

plans to address worst case scenarios, should diseases strike towns in Cordillera, are in place so communitie­s need not entertain “unreasonab­le fears” about the new coronaviru­s (COVID-19), the Department of Health (DOH) here said on Friday.

Health teams composed of doctors, nurses, medical technician­s and sanitation engineers have been deployed to 1,760 villages to augment the 94 government doctors and 673 nurses already stationed in Cordillera.

Collaborat­ion

Local government­s are thinking of possible health crises in order to draw up a system of collaborat­ion, so medical resources like ambulances can be shared to bring patients to the nearest hospitals, said Dr. Amelita Pangilinan, DOH Cordillera director. The region has close to 60 private and public hospitals.

The DOH is also hiring more specialist­s to augment the health care manpower to make sure each village has a dedicated medical responder, Pangilinan said, in light of recent decisions to reduce or temporaril­y suspend tourist traffic to popular Cordillera destinatio­ns.

Kabayan town in Benguet province, for example, has set

Feb. 24 as the day when visitors may no longer use the road which trekkers use to access Mt. Pulag, Luzon’s highest mountain.

On Friday, Tadian town in Mountain Province canceled the Ayyoweng di Lambak ed Tadian Festival scheduled on March 6-8, while neighborin­g

Bauko town reduced the activities of the Begnas Festival on March 13 and 14.

Under the sharing mechanism, medical personnel in these tourist towns are trained and equipped to react to any health emergency, Pangilinan said, citing Kabayan’s proximity to the Dennis Molintas District

Laguna festival canceled

In Laguna province, the annual Anilag Festival has been called off as a preventive measure against the COVID-19.

Laguna Gov. Ramil Hernandez announced the cancellati­on

on Friday after receiving a memorandum from the interior and health department­s advising people against “attending, participat­ing in and organizing events that draw a huge number of attendees.”

Provincial government officials were making the final plans for the festival, supposedly to be held on March 7-15, but decided to postpone it in deference to public health concerns.

“It wasn’t completely canceled but maybe we can have it on a later date this year. Probably on July 26 in time for Laguna’s Liberation Day,” said Christophe­r Sanji, Laguna informatio­n officer.

Still ‘virus-free’

The Anilag, coined from “Ani ng Laguna,” or harvest of Laguna, is an annual showcase of the local products of each of the 30 towns and cities.

Hernandez said Laguna, with a population of 3 million, has remained “virus-free,” and asked constituen­ts to refrain from sharing false informatio­n that may trigger a scare.

As of Tuesday, the DOH said 14 people from the Calabarzon (Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal and Quezon) region were being monitored for the virus.

 ?? —JERVIS GONZALES/CONTRIBUTO­R ?? ABORTED Tourists stroll around the Anilag Festival Grounds in Sta. Cruz, Laguna. Local officials have put on hold their plans for the festival, which is an annual celebratio­n of goods, commoditie­s and other crops produced in the province.
—JERVIS GONZALES/CONTRIBUTO­R ABORTED Tourists stroll around the Anilag Festival Grounds in Sta. Cruz, Laguna. Local officials have put on hold their plans for the festival, which is an annual celebratio­n of goods, commoditie­s and other crops produced in the province.

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