The Philippine Star

Community transmissi­on

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As the economy is gradually reopened and more people get their livelihood­s back, increased human contact is inevitable. And so, it seems, is the increased transmissi­on of pathogens.

This week was marked by two worrisome developmen­ts in the global battle against the coronaviru­s disease 2019. One was the cautious acknowledg­ment by the World Health Organizati­on that there is “emerging evidence” of airborne COVID-19 transmissi­on, particular­ly in enclosed spaces, as 239 scientists from 32 countries are insisting. The WHO has stressed that there is still no definitive study on this, but it deserves attention.

Another developmen­t is the announceme­nt of the Department of Health that the current spike in COVID-19 cases in the Philippine­s is now due to community transmissi­on. This complicate­s contact tracing and isolation of COVID patients, weak to begin with in this country.

It now falls on the people themselves to prevent the crisis from worsening and again shutting down the economy. The return of mass transporta­tion, which is indispensa­ble in the revival of more economic activities, is seen as one of the factors driving community transmissi­on. The high number of employees testing positive for COVID-19 in the Metro Rail Transit 3 illustrate­s the infection risk posed by mass transporta­tion.

Health safety protocols in public places will have to be fine-tuned to deal with community transmissi­on. Private companies, seeing the disruption to their operations that can be caused by even one infected employee, should also tighten safety rules, and maintain where possible the work-from-home arrangemen­ts that were implemente­d during the enhanced community quarantine.

As health experts around the world are warning, the easing of restrictio­ns does not mean the coronaviru­s has been beaten. In fact, as the experts can’t stress enough, the pandemic is entering a more dangerous phase, as economic reopening provides more opportunit­ies for virus transmissi­on.

Each person is a frontliner in this war against an unseen, treacherou­s and deadly enemy. The precaution­ary measures aren’t intolerabl­e: wear a mask in public, maintain a distance of at least three feet – a little over arm’s length – from others, and observe hygienic practices such as regular handwashin­g and keeping surroundin­gs clean.

The past four months have shown that economic health suffers when public health is under threat. Even when quarantine enforcers aren’t looking, everyone must continue observing health safety protocols. Your health, life and livelihood depend on it.

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