Sun.Star Pampanga

Waysof looking

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million doses of Sinovac

arrived this week, adding to the count of 10,329,050 doses that the Philippine­s received as of June 10, 2021. As of press time, a batch of 2,279,160 PfizerBioN­Tech doses was also arriving. The biggest single-day del i ver y, Pr esi dent i al spokespero­n Harry Roque Jr. cl ai ms.

Vaccine czar Carlito Galvez Jr. says the new deliveries are part of the 11,058,000 doses that are expected to arrive in

June. He was expecting 5.5 million doses of Sinovac, one million of Sputnik V from Gamaleya in Russia, 250,000 from Moderna, 2.28 million of Pfizer-BioNTech and 2.028 million of AstraZenec­a.

Countries have set a target of their population to achieve herd immunity at the end of 2021. For a population to muscle a resistance against an infectious disease, it has either to reach a certain number of survivors or vaccinated i ndi vi dual s.

Last month, the Philippine government lowered its target from 70 million to 50 million, with the Department of Health (DOH) saying that the objective now is to achieve “population immunity,” which Health Undersecre­tary Myrna Cabotaje said means reducing the number of deaths and hospitaliz­ed patients through vaccinatio­n. How that objective differs from “herd immunity”wasn’t explained.

But Galvez was clear that the lowering of the targeted population was due to a supply shortage following the surge in India.

Meanwhile, government media, the Philippine News Agency (PNA), released a happy report on May 23, 2021 on the country’s vaccinatio­n status, citing a foreign press data that says that the Philippine­s had administer­ed a total of 4,097,425 doses since its March 1 rollout. The country, the PNA report said, comes second to Indonesia, which had a total of 24,723,728 doses since its January rollout. Incidental­ly, “the country ranked 13th in Asia and 37th worldwide”in terms of accomplish­ed jabs, the PNA reported.

The report has since then circulated, and widely especially on social media, creating the impression that the government’s vaccinatio­n program has been faring better than those in most other countries in Southeast Asia.

The report eventually gained its share of criticisms. Former government adviser in the Covid fight Dr. Tony Leachon on social media said vaccinatio­n performanc­e must be gauged by how much percent of the targeted population has been inoculated. This suggestion sent fact-checkers in media to verify the numbers.

Going by Leachon’s suggestion, it appears that the Philippine­s in late May places ninth in the vaccinatio­n status. Using UN Population estimates, Singapore ranked first, having vaccinated 24.62 percent of its targeted population of 1,440,544. It was followed by Cambodia, which targeted only 10,000,000, at 14.47 percent.

Even while the Philippine­s decreased its target to 50 million to achieve what it calls “population immunity,” it only had vaccinated 1.9 percent of its target, although the country has one of the highest population targets, second to Indonesia, which aims to inoculate 181,554,465 people.

The better reportoria­l slant, unfortunat­ely, doesn’t favor government. A rollout performanc­e of only 1.9 percent shows how slow we are in this race, and can’t be won by a media spin.

The WHO says the pandemic has actually gotten worse even as the times appear on the contrary. A number of countries have been limping with new surges despite having vaccinatio­n programs that are way better than the Philippine­s’.---Sunnex

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