Philippine Daily Inquirer

Search for the infected: Firemen also tapped

- By Nestor Corrales @Ncorralesi­nq

Even firemen will be part of the action.

Interior Secretary Eduardo Año on Friday ordered the Bureau of Fire Protection (BFP) to join the Philippine National Police in assisting health workers in the transfer of COVID-19 patients from their houses to government isolation facilities.

According to Año, the BFP’S Emergency Medical Service and Special Rescue Units have the necessary health personnel and equipment to transport infected individual­s.

On July 14, Año said the police would conduct “house-tohouse” visits to COVID-19 patients, drawing criticism from various sectors. He later clarified that the police would only assist health workers and local government units.

‘Supporting role’

“Again, I repeat, the police are there merely in a supporting role,” he said, adding that reports of the police and the military going on house-tohouse searches for coronaviru­s-positive patients were “part of the disinforma­tion campaign by unscrupulo­us individual­s.”

Año warned that those who defied authoritie­s would be penalized under Republic Act No. 11332, or the Mandatory Reporting of Notifiable Diseases and Health Events of Public Health Concern Act.

Contact tracing

Under government’s guidelines, only those who have their own room and own bathroom and who do not share the house with a pregnant, elderly, and other vulnerable persons may be on home quarantine.

Aside from assisting local government units and health workers, the BFP has been ordered to intensify its contact tracing efforts, Año said.

He said the BFP had helped in the tracing of the close contacts of 18,871 COVID-19 patients.

Since the start of the pandemic, the BFP has mobilized 73.80 percent of its personnel (or 20,947 officers out of the 29,383 total manpower) to help in the efforts of the Department of the Interior and Local Government to fight the pandemic, Ano said.

He said a total of 1,207 BFP vehicles nationwide had been used for decontamin­ation, water rationing, flushing at control points, patient transport and other ancillary services.

Elsewhere, Senate Minority Leader Franklin Drilon rebuked PNP chief Gen. Archie Gamboa for saying that the police’s search for COVID-19 patients would be like tracking down criminals.

“Such remark is uncalled for. It does not achieve anything, but instill fear rather than trust in law enforcers and in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic,” Drilon said in a statement on Friday.

‘Not criminals’

“The individual­s afflicted with the virus are not criminals, and they should not in any way be viewed as and compared to criminals. That is very wrong,” he said, adding: “Rather than threaten them with such remarks, let’s help them and their families.”

Drilon, a former justice secretary, earlier said that Año’s order to deploy PNP personnel in locating individual­s suspected of contractin­g the pneumonia-like ailment would violate the constituti­onal ban against unreasonab­le searches and warrantles­s arrests.

‘More circumspec­t’

He advised Gamboa and other officials to be “more circumspec­t in their choice of words,” and reminded them that the contagion was a public health concern “and not a simple law-and-order issue.”

Drilon warned that COVID-19 patients who would refuse to be taken to state-run quarantine facilities might suffer the fate of those killed by policemen tasked to carry out the government’s bloody war on drugs.

“We must change our frame of mind: The enemy here is the virus, not the people,” he said.

 ??  ?? MGA TRAFFIC AIDE ISAMA NA RIN!
MGA TRAFFIC AIDE ISAMA NA RIN!
 ?? —MARK ALVIC ESPLANA ?? DIFFERENT ROLE Health workers together with personnel of the Bureau of Fire Protection in Albay province wait for a resident due to be tested for the coronaviru­s.
—MARK ALVIC ESPLANA DIFFERENT ROLE Health workers together with personnel of the Bureau of Fire Protection in Albay province wait for a resident due to be tested for the coronaviru­s.

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