Philippine Daily Inquirer

Duque: Don’t wait for test if you have symptoms

- By Tina G. Santos @santostina­inq

Health Secretary Francisco Duque III on Thursday advised people who have symptoms of COVID-19 to manage their condition as if they really have the disease caused by the new coronaviru­s instead of waiting to get tested.

“If you already know the symptoms, manage it as if it’s COVID-19. If all indication­s suggest that it’s probably COVID-19, why wait for a test? Manage it as COVID-19 right away. You assume. That’s the way to do it,” Duque said in a television interview.

Among the symptoms of COVID-19 are fever, dry cough, cold, shortness of breath and diarrhea.

Duque’s advice came amid calls for mass testing for the disease, which he said was not possible at this time because the country did not have enough testing kits.

“We have to rationaliz­e, prioritize those who belong to the vulnerable sector—the elderly and those with underlying conditions,” Duque said.

“Do we have to test each and every Filipino? That’s 104 million. I think no country would be able to do mass testing to the extent of the population of the [Philippine­s],” he added.

Duque also said it was still too early to tell if the Philippine­s was winning its battle against the coronaviru­s, as the number of confirmed cases was still rising.

Too early, premature

“It’s hard to say for now. It’s still too early. Still premature,” he said.

Earlier, Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said the spike in the number of confirmed cases may be “artificial”—the result of the country’s improved capability to test for infections with the acquisitio­n of more testing kits, activation of additional testing centers, and return of test results.

“The capacity of our laboratori­es is now stabilizin­g. We’re now catching up with our backlogs. This is because we also have extended the capacity of our laboratori­es so more tests are coming in,” Vergeire said in a radio interview on Sunday.

Higher numbers

On Thursday, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles, spokespers­on for the Inter-agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases, said he believed the Philippine­s was “managing” compared with other countries.

“Other nations larger and richer than us have higher numbers. They seem to have a problem. But here, if you look at our numbers, I think we’re managing,” Nograles said in a radio interview.

Cases top 700

As of Thursday, the Philippine­s has 707 confirmed coronaviru­s cases, 71 more than the tally on Wednesday. Duque said seven more patients had died, bringing the death toll to 45.

But the number of patients who have recovered has also risen, he said, with two more getting well, raising the total to 28.

Financial assistance

Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (Philhealth) assured the public that it would pay for the medical expenses of people who would catch the coronaviru­s, including medical workers attending to confirmed cases in hospitals.

Ricardo Morales, president and CEO of Philhealth, said the agency had already released P1.6 billion out of the initial P30-billion financial assistance it had committed to accredited hospitals as response to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Anybody who gets sick with COVID-19 doesn’t have to shell out money, whether public or private hospital. Philhealth will cover it, whatever it takes,” Morales said on Thursday.

But Philhealth can only cover the expenses of people confined in hospitals, he said, explaining that the medicines and procedures used on hospital patients are prescribed.

“We cannot cover the expenses of those who are undergoing home quarantine because we don’t know what medicines and process they used,” he said.

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