Philippine Daily Inquirer

10 MORE CITIES TO GET BIGGER SHARE OF JABS

- By Maricar Cinco @maricarcin­coINQ

The National Task Force Against COVID-19 (NTF) has expanded the government’s vaccinatio­n focus area by adding 10 more cities that would get a bigger share of vaccines in the coming weeks.

These are the cities of Bacolod, Iloilo, Cagayan de Oro, Baguio, Zamboanga, Dumaguete, Tuguegarao, General Santos, Naga and Legazpi.

Collective­ly called the “Plus 10” area, these cities would get more doses, just as the original priority group (Metro Manila, Cavite, Laguna, Pampanga, Batangas, Rizal, Bulacan, Metro Davao and Metro Cebu), than the rest of the country.

Given the limited global vaccine supply, the NTF prioritize­s the densest areas, key economic drivers and those experienci­ng a case surge, said vaccinatio­n deputy chief Vince Dizon in Thursday’s briefing with Israeli health experts who were in the Philippine­s for a cross-country sharing of experience­s on pandemic response.

“The allocation plan always considers, first and foremost, the capacity, the adequacy, of the correct storage temperatur­e,” said Health Secretary Francisco Duque III, noting that some areas in the Philippine­s lacked cold chain capacity to handle vaccine brands that require ultracold temperatur­e.

According to the Department of Health, the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao and the regions of Caraga, Soccsksarg­en, Bicol and Mimaropa, still lack ultralow freezers and are therefore incapable of getting Pfizer, Moderna and Sputnik V.

Diversifie­d portfolio

But Duque said: “That’s the beauty of the policy of the national government to adapt a diversifie­d vaccine portfolio [since] there are limitation­s in some regions where there is no adequate ultralow storage capacity. So we give them the Sinovac [and] other vaccines.”

Health Undersecre­tary Myrna Cabotaje, also chief of the National Vaccinatio­n Operations Center, said areas without ultralow freezers could also get AstraZenec­a doses.

Cabotaje said the country had administer­ed 9.2 million doses as of June 23 and was about 97-percent complete in inoculatin­g 1.6 million health workers at least with a first dose.

Dizon said with the average daily inoculatio­n (about 300,000) in June, the country could hit 4 to 5 million doses injected this month, or just about the same combined output in the previous three months.

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