The Philippine Star

IATF to intensify contact tracing at entry ports

- By CHRISTINA MENDEZ – With Romina Cabrera

With almost 10,000 new cases reported in the past week, the government is intensifyi­ng its surveillan­ce and contact tracing efforts as well as swabbing – via polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing – for coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) at all ports of entry.

The Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) approved Resolution No. 53 a few days after it also allowed the gradual reopening of the economy and the resumption of domestic and internatio­nal flights to allow travel of Filipinos with observance of health protocols and travel guidelines.

Under Resolution No. 53 dated July 9, the IATF approved the recommenda­tions of the National Task Force Against COVID-19, led by Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana and the Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr), to hire more civilians for contact tracing and swabbing at ports of entry.

The move is aimed at preventing the community transmissi­on of the virus, as the government balances the need to reopen the economy and maintain public safety.

The IATF designated Subic and other ports as hubs for internatio­nal crew changes, with strict adherence to establishe­d health protocols and guidelines.

The body also allowed the establishm­ent of one-stop shops under the DOTr for the uniform processing of arrivals in all gateways.

“Due to the developmen­ts in the situation of the COVID-19 health event in the country, further amendments are required to further streamline the government’s response to the pandemic,” the IATF said in the resolution.

The IATF also mandated that all inbound flight crew should observe the protocols set by the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­ons.

“The Department of Transporta­tion, including its attached agencies such as the Civil Aeronautic­s Board and Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippine­s, is hereby directed to issue necessary guidelines, specifying that inbound flight crew must remain in their accommodat­ion establishm­ents upon arrival to avoid transmissi­on,” it added.

According to the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), there is still no budget for the mass hiring of at least 50,000 contact tracers.

DILG spokesman Undersecre­tary Jonathan Malaya said that while the department was designated to lead the hiring of contact tracers, it has yet to receive any funds from the Department of Budget and Management (DBM).

Still, Malaya said they hope to start the hiring process before the end of the month.

“We still do not have the funds. We hope to hire before the end of the month. God willing the DILG would receive the funds,” he said in Filipino and English at a Laging Handa press briefing.

The DILG official said they have already submitted a budget proposal and worker compensati­on menu to the DBM, but there is no official communicat­ion from them yet.

Malaya said that they will prioritize hiring applicants who are graduates of medical science or criminolog­y courses.

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