Philippine Daily Inquirer

500 PINOY PATIENTS JOINING INT’L TRIAL FOR CORONAVIRU­S DRUG

- By Tina G. Santos @santostina­inq —WITH A REPORT FROM DONA Z. PAZZIBUGAN

Five hundred Filipino COVID-19 patients will join an internatio­nal trial of possible drugs for the disease caused by the new coronaviru­s, the Department of Health (DOH) said on Thursday.

Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said the clinical trial in the Philippine­s would be held in at least 20 hospitals across the country. It could start as early as Friday, she said.

Four drugs

The “solidarity trial” is a study of the safety and effectiven­ess of four possible drugs for Covid-19—remdesivir, under research for the treatment of other coronaviru­ses; the anTI-HIV lopinavir or ritonavir or the combinatio­n of these two; interferon; and the antimalari­al chloroquin­e.

Vergeire said more than 90 countries were taking part in the trial and that the number of participat­ing patients and the trial period could be expanded later.

There is no cure for COVID-19 at present.

President Duterte has offered a reward of P10 million for any Filipino scientist who could develop a vaccine for the disease.

Developing a vaccine is a tedious process and requires comprehens­ive research, Vergeire said. “There are many small clinical trials in different countries but these are not at all conclusive. They are all experiment­al,” she said.

Plasma therapy

The Philippine General Hospital (PGH) is trying convalesce­nt plasma therapy to treat the disease. On Wednesday, the hospital said its patients who had been given plasma from recovered COVID-19 patients had been showing improvemen­t.

On Thursday, the PGH renewed its call for plasma donations from recovered COVID-19 patients.

“We are calling for plasma donations from COVID-19 survivors. Their antibodies may help save patients who are still battling the disease, especially the severe and critical cases,” said Dr. Jonas del Rosario, the PGH spokespers­on.

On Thursday, the DOH reported 16 new coronaviru­s deaths and 271 new confirmed infections.

In its latest bulletin, the department said 16 patients had died, raising the toll to 462, and the additional infections brought the total to 6,981. It said 29 patients had recovered, pushing the number of survivors to 722.

Vergeire said it was still too early to say whether the spread of the coronaviru­s in the country was slowing to a manageable level.

She said the case doubling of coronaviru­s infection had slowed to five days from three.

“That’s a good indication because it means the rise in the number of cases is not fast,” Vergeire said.

But the daily DOH report is not real-time, she said, because of a gap in the “turnaround time,” which she did not explain.

The situation could be worsened by the arrival of thousands of Filipino migrant workers who have lost their jobs in lockdowns in other countries with coronaviru­s infections. (See related story in Regions, Page A8.)

Nearly 18,000 migrant workers are coming home in the coming days, according to the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), which is leading the repatriati­on of Filipinos who have been temporaril­y laid off their foreign jobs due to shutdowns forced by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Quarantine

The DFA is appealing to returning migrants to observe quarantine measures to avoid worsening the local outbreak.

Returning migrants are required to be quarantine­d for 14 days in DOH isolation centers before they can be allowed to reunite with their families.

Answering questions about the high rate of infection among health-care workers, Vergeire said the problem was not mainly due to the lack of personal protective equipment but might also be the result of long working hours and patients’ withholdin­g of complete informatio­n.

“For health-care workers, that’s a given. The risk that they take is really high. Even in other countries, a certain percentage of their COVID-19 [patients] is really health-care workers. They are really at risk of getting the disease because they care for [the] patients,” Vergeire said.

 ?? —LYN RILLON ?? CHALLENGIN­G TIMES FOR PGH Two respirator­y therapists set up a mechanical ventilator for COVID-19 patients at the critical care unit of the Philippine General Hospital on Thursday. The government-run hospital is currently trying the convalesce­nt plasma therapy to treat the disease.
—LYN RILLON CHALLENGIN­G TIMES FOR PGH Two respirator­y therapists set up a mechanical ventilator for COVID-19 patients at the critical care unit of the Philippine General Hospital on Thursday. The government-run hospital is currently trying the convalesce­nt plasma therapy to treat the disease.
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