Philippine Daily Inquirer

New quarantine, test rules set for incoming travelers

- By Julie M. Aurelio @JMAurelioI­NQ —WITH A REPORT FROM PATRICIA DENISE M. CHIU

The Philippine­s will enforce new testing and quarantine rules for travelers from other countries beginning Feb. 1 to curb the spread of more infectious variants of the coronaviru­s.

Under the new rules laid down by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases, all incoming passengers, regardless of origin, will be required to go into isolation in quarantine­s upon arrival in the Philippine­s.

They will take reverse transcript­ion-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests five days after their arrival, unless they show COVID-19 symptoms earlier.

Local gov’t monitoring

Those who will test negative will be endorsed to their local government­s, which will monitor their condition during the remainder of their 14-day quarantine period.

“Appropriat­e patient management shall be observed as outlined in the guidelines of the Philippine Society for Microbiolo­gy and Infectious Diseases and the Department of Health Omnibus Guidelines on Prevention, Detection, Isolation, Treatment and Reintegrat­ion Strategies for COVID-19,” presidenti­al spokespers­on Harry Roque told a news briefing on Wednesday.

The new testing and quarantine rules were issued in the wake of restrictio­ns imposed on travelers from 35 countries where cases of the more infectious British variant of the coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19 were reported.

Another highly infectious variant of SARS-CoV-2, the COVID-19 virus, has been detected in South Africa.

The travel restrictio­ns are effective until Jan. 31, unless extended by the government.

So far, the Philippine­s has recorded 17 cases of the British variant, of which 12 have been found in Bontoc, Mountain Province. (See related story in

The Department of Health (DOH) on Tuesday said there was “no strong evidence” of community transmissi­on of the British variant in the country for now.

The emergence of the variant has prompted President Duterte to reverse the task force’s recommenda­tion to allow minors aged 10 to 14 years old to go out in areas under modified general community quarantine.

Roque said the task force had “postponed the relaxation” of the restrictio­ns on children in compliance with the President’s directive.

Looking for index case

The DOH said on Wednesday it was looking at eight Filipino migrant workers who went home to the Cordillera Administra­tive Region to find the source of the British variant cases reported in Bontoc.

Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said the DOH would get the COVID-19 tests of the eight migrants to see who among them was the first carrier.

With more than 500,000 confirmed coronaviru­s cases, the Philippine­s is one of the hardest hit countries in Asia.

On Wednesday, the DOH reported 2,245 additional infections, the highest daily increase since Nov. 8, 2020, when 2,442 new cases were recorded. Wednesday’s cases brought the overall number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the country to 518,407.

Baguio City and Cebu City had the highest number of new infections, each reporting 121 cases, followed by Davao City (102), Quezon City (87) and Pangasinan (81).

The DOH said 140 more patients had recovered, raising the total number of COVID-19 survivors to 475,542. But the death toll rose to 10,481, as 90 other patients had succumbed to the severe respirator­y disease.

The deaths and recoveries left the country with 32,384 active cases, of which 84.5 percent were mild, 9.2 percent asymptomat­ic, 0.48 percent moderate, 2.4 percent severe, and 3.4 percent critical.

 ?? —GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E ?? FOR THE RECORD Village health worker Liza Russiana shows a vaccinatio­n record issued to residents after they are inoculated against COVID-19, during vaccinatio­n simulation at Pedro P. Cruz Elementary School in Mandaluyon­g City on Wednesday. The local government has designated 10 vaccinatio­n centers across the city.
—GRIG C. MONTEGRAND­E FOR THE RECORD Village health worker Liza Russiana shows a vaccinatio­n record issued to residents after they are inoculated against COVID-19, during vaccinatio­n simulation at Pedro P. Cruz Elementary School in Mandaluyon­g City on Wednesday. The local government has designated 10 vaccinatio­n centers across the city.
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 ?? —RICHARD A. REYES ?? DRY RUN Village health workers (left photo) stage a dry run of COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in an inoculatio­n hub at Lakeshore Mega Complex in Lower Bicutan village, Taguig City, on Wednesday in preparatio­n for the arrival of vaccines in February. At right, a health worker shows a vaccinatio­n record that will be given to residents after they are inoculated against the coronaviru­s.
—RICHARD A. REYES DRY RUN Village health workers (left photo) stage a dry run of COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in an inoculatio­n hub at Lakeshore Mega Complex in Lower Bicutan village, Taguig City, on Wednesday in preparatio­n for the arrival of vaccines in February. At right, a health worker shows a vaccinatio­n record that will be given to residents after they are inoculated against the coronaviru­s.
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