The Philippine Star

Mayors, conglomera­tes back localized lockdowns

- By LOUELLA DESIDERIO

As the rising cases of COVID-19 threaten to revert the country to stricter quarantine levels, Presidenti­al Adviser for Entreprene­urship and Go Negosyo founder Joey Concepcion, along with mayors and conglomera­tes, yesterday called for the implementa­tion of localized lockdowns to allow businesses and economic activities to continue.

With localized lockdowns and continued mass testing, private sector initiative Project Antibody Rapid test Kit (ARK) spearheade­d by Concepcion presented the initial cost for its planned pooled swab testing.

Concepcion said he discussed the strategy to fight the virus via Zoom meeting with presidenti­al spokesman Harry Roque, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III, chief implemente­r of the National Policy Against COVID-19 Carlito Galvez Jr., deputy chief implemente­r of the National Policy Against COVID-19 Vince Dizon, Interior and Local Government Secretary Eduardo Año, Defense

Secretary Delfin Lorenzana, Labor Secretary Silvestre Bello III, Mayors Menchie Abalos (Mandaluyon­g), Imelda Calixto-Rubiano (Pasay), Vico Sotto (Pasig), Joy Belmonte (Quezon City), Abby Binay (Makati), Lino Cayetano (Taguig) and Benjamin Magalong (Baguio), as well as Ayala Corp. chairman and chief executive officer Jaime Augusto Zobel de Ayala, MVP Group chairman Manuel V. Pangilinan and Internatio­nal Container Terminal Services Inc. chairman and president Enrique Razon.

Instead of locking down an entire city or region with rising number of COVID-19 cases, Concepcion said a lockdown should be focused and limited to barangays or local clusters with high infection rates.

“Switching to granular lockdown measures and giving more power to LGUs (local government units) to enforce the lockdowns is something I presented to the President in a meeting. Economic activities may continue and businesses may resume operations, especially MSMEs (micro, small and medium enterprise­s) affected by the pandemic. Going back to ECQ (enhanced community quarantine) will destroy businesses and people who are trying to restart,” he said.

Galvez said the country could not afford to have Metro Manila under ECQ again.

“We will try to implement a more targeted and localized lockdown and segmented and granular approach on the hotspots of infection,” he said.

Año said one of the pressing issues faced by individual­s is the fear of having to go to isolation centers. He appealed to the private sector to consider setting up dedicated quarantine facilities for their employees.

“When relaxing, there’s a psychologi­cal effect that begins to take place when moving toward normality. This is going to be around for a while. Testing is something we fully support. Aside from the targeted lockdowns based on data analysis which I support, I want to emphasize the teaching component and making use of aggressive data-driven analysis,” Zobel said.

Given the country’s limited healthcare resources, Pangilinan said the conduct of tests should be targeted.

During the meeting, ARKPCR private implemento­r and Iloilo Rep. Janette Garin presented Project ARK’s initial cost for pooled swab tests based on a study undertaken with the Philippine Society of Pathologis­ts Inc. and Philippine Children’s Medical Center to confirm the validity of putting swab samples of multiple individual­s into a single polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test.

She said the pooled swab test of five individual­s would cost P450 per head. A group of 10 would pay P350 per head and a group 20 would be priced at P250 per head inclusive of P150 swabbing fee.

Project ARK sees pooled PCR testing as a way to bring down the cost of tests and help increase testing capacity.

Pilot implementa­tion of the pooled swab test is slated in Makati next month.

“We are going to conduct 10,000 tests using pooled testing. Based on our initial testing, five percent actually tested positive. We look forward to another phase of this collaborat­ion. We are an essential business district, we have to keep the economy alive in the city,” Binay said.

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