Sun.Star Pampanga

Boost vaccine supply

-

Watch out for booster hopper s.

“Vaccinatio­n hoppers,” as termed by the Philippine News Agency, are persons fully inoculated against coronaviru­s disease 2019 (Covid-19) who go to another local government unit to get another dose of their preferred vaccine brand as a booster shot.

Persons with weak immune systems, such as organ transplant recipients and persons taking immune-suppressin­g maintenanc­e medicine, are shown by research to have a weak response to initial doses of the vaccine, reported the American media organizati­on National Public Radio on Saturday, Aug. 14, 2021.

US federal health agencies recently approved booster shots for immunocomp­romised persons to enhance their protection against Covid-19.

In the Philippine­s, though, Covid-19 boosters are not just immoral but also illegal, declared National Task Force Against Covid-19 head Secretary

Carlito Galvez Jr.

In an Aug. 14 PNA report, Galvez said that Covid-19 vaccines are “precious,” especially because many Filipinos remain unvaccinat­ed.

He singled out as among the vulnerable who are still awaiting their initial dose of the Covid-19 vaccine “residents in far-flung areas or geographic­ally isolated and disadvanta­ged areas.”

Based on ourworldin­data.org, only 11 percent of Filipinos are fully vaccinated and have a degree of protection from the virus, including variants such as Delta, which is highly transmi ssi bl e.

Only 1.9 percent of the Philippine population received at least one dose of a Covid19 vaccine.

According to the United Nations, the Philippine population is 111,185,350, as of Aug. 9. This means that 96,731,254 Filipinos, or 87 percent of the populace have yet to be vaccinated with the first dose.

The figure definitely implies that even urban centers are deprived of the Covid-19 vaccine supply to meet the demand of citizens.

The slow rollout of the vaccinatio­n program in the country was initially blamed on vaccine hesitancy among many Filipinos. Many Filipinos were reportedly staying away from being vaccinated due to cognitive and attitudina­l baggage left by false claims that vaccines are more harmful than Covid-19 and that the virus is a “plandemic,” or a conspiracy organized by opportunis­ts, for instance.

Mistrust lingering from the 2017 Dengvaxia controvers­y also made some Filipinos scared of the Covid-19 vaccine.

Yet, by July 30, when President Duterte announced the lockdown again of many local government units as an attempt to control the rise of cases of infection with the Delta variant, many citizens personally experience­d the root cause of the country’s slow pace of vaccinatio­n.

It is not the hesitancy of citizens to be inoculated but the intermitte­nt and inadequate supply of vaccines that slows down or even halts the setting of vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts.

Local government­s must manage the crowds of citizens who risk going to vaccinatio­n centers without registerin­g or receiving a confirmed appointmen­t in their attempts to get inoculated.

Last Aug. 5, a day before the reimpositi­on of the nationwide lockdown, vax centers in Metro Manila and other cities in Luzon drew crowds who panicked due to fake news spread through social media that no vaccinatio­n meant no work or no government aid.

Overcrowde­d vaccinatio­n centers present a real public health threat as potential supersprea­ders of the Delta variant.

Yet, the reports of booster-seeking opportunis­m surfacing in what seemingly is a widespread scarcity of vaccine supply should challenge local officials to confront and deal with the root of lapses in stepping up Covid-19 vaccinatio­n in the country. Instead of blaming citizens for staying away from inoculatio­n, the government should address the intermitte­nt and insufficie­nt supply of vaccines that makes everyone, even the vaccinated, vulnerable to the virus, the rise of variants and deleteriou­s consequenc­es in other spheres, such as recession. (Sunnex)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines