Sun.Star Pampanga

Waiting for vax

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I am in the pale. In numbers, I belong to the 87 percent of the country’s population that have not been vaccinated against coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19), by choice or not.

It is the latter in our case. The husband and I have registered when the local government units in Luzon where we live and work made the call for A3 and A4 groups, prioritize­d due to underlying health conditions and working in the public, private and informal sect or s.

Our latest registrati­on was in the Parañaque website, open also to non-residents. The government launched a “mega vaccinatio­n site” at the Nayong Pilipino, with eight “ambulatory vaccinatio­n centers and 30 drive-thru booths” and the capacity to inoculate “at least 15,000 persons a day.”

Currently, the husband and I still belong to the 96,731,254 Filipinos that have not received even one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine.

As of Aug. 9, the country’s population is 111,185,350, according to the United Nations. Only 11 percent of Filipinos are fully vaccinated while 1.9 percent have at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, based on the ourworldin­data.org.

Vaccine equity has to leap out from public health jargon into reality because the supply of vaccines is insufficie­nt to meet the demand.

In our part of Cavite, the administra­tion of the second dose of Covid-19 vaccines was delayed for weeks and has just been resumed. Prioritize­d are the A2 and A3 groups, who are el d er l y, have comorbidit­ies, or are both.

Yet, the A4 (frontline economic workers) and A5 (indigent) groups are also vulnerable. Many Calabarzon residents commute to and fro Metro Manila for work, putting them daily at risk.

When the poor get sick, they rarely rush to hospitals. “Coronaviru­s inequality,” to borrow the phrase used in a “Washington Post” article, is the reality that those with less in life fear more a lockdown than disease.

The former means hunger, a protracted dying. Covid-19 works quickly on people with poor nutrition and health and little or no resources for work from home, physical distancing, isolation and hospitaliz­ation.

I will accept any vaccine but first, it must be available.

I will wait for a vax appointmen­t, which every government website I have registered in promises to send but has yet to fulfill.

The local government unit at the same time reported 13 new cases of COVID 19 including a 1-year old boy from Barangay San Vicente and a 76year old woman from Barangay San Isidro.

Mayor Romy Pecson said that 930 out of the 1,074 total patients had recovered from the virus.

There are 105 active cases as of August 14, according to the mayor. Pecson appealed to his constituen­ts to continue observing health protocols to prevent infection. 30

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