The Philippine Star

Vaccine priority pushed for NCR, high-risk areas

- By ALEXIS ROMERO

To prevent a further surge of infections, the National Task Force against COVID-19 (NTF) intends to prioritize infection hotspots for COVID-19 vaccinatio­n, even as the government braces for possible delays in vaccine delivery because of tight global supply.

“Mr. President, considerin­g we will have what is called falloff or shortfall in terms of supply, we are recommendi­ng a prioritiza­tion. Meaning, let’s look at the areas with economic and social importance. We would have a problem if we don’t act on them, especially National Capital Region (NCR),” NTF chief implemente­r and vaccine czar Carlito Galvez Jr. said during the government’s pandemic task force meeting last Monday.

“Instead of concentrat­ing on the 110 (million) population, we have to concentrat­e only (on) 83 million population. And then if we (achieve) the 70 percent or the herd immunity in these areas, there’s a huge chance that we can recover our economy and we prevent a surge in traditiona­l areas that are very vulnerable,” he added.

Priority areas in Luzon are Metro Manila and six nearby provinces, as well as Calabarzon, Central Luzon, Baguio City, Cordillera Administra­tive Region and Cagayan Valley.

In the Visayas, priority areas are Metro Cebu City, Bacolod City, Iloilo City, Central Visayas,

Western Visayas and Eastern Visayas, while in Mindanao, the list is topped by Cagayan de Oro City, Davao City, Zamboanga City, General Santos City, Iligan City, Davao region, Zamboanga peninsula and Northern Mindanao.

Herd immunity

Galvez said that under the prioritiza­tion strategy, the Philippine­s can attain herd immunity with the vaccinatio­n of 50 to 70 million people. This can be achieved if 500,000 jabs are administer­ed per day or at least three million jabs per week, supplied with at least 15 million vaccine doses per month, rolled out in 5,000 vaccinatio­n sites manned by 25,000 to 50,000 vaccinator­s.

“We can have the herd immunity in NCR and the plus six provinces around NCR by November; that’s what we are looking at, 180 days. But our target for the others is we will scale up to 213 days with more or less, with the same productivi­ty. Our target in NCR is 120,000 a day; but in our national target, 500,000 jabs a day. Our target timeline is 200 to 213 days starting June,” he said.

Galvez admitted 30 million vaccine doses from India may be delayed while the arrival of COVID-19 jabs from Novavax may be moved to September because of surging cases in India.

Last Monday, President

Duterte thanked the Russian government for the delivery of the first batch of Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccines.

Yesterday, at the Sta. Ana hospital, the Manila city government started vaccinatin­g medical frontliner­s using the Russian-made jabs.

Vice Mayor Honey Lacuna-Pangan said medical frontliner­s would be jabbed first, followed by other priority groups. About 59 medical frontliner­s have already been vaccinated using Sputnik V.

In Parañaque City, the Sputnik V vaccine rollout was met with increased confidence by residents, Mayor Edwin Olivarez said. More than a thousand individual­s received Russian-made jabs at the Parañaque City mall, days after the city received 3,000 doses of Sputnik V.

Meanwhile, Department of Labor and Employment Undersecre­tary Benjo Benavidez reiterated that any employee who refuses or fails to be vaccinated shall not be discrimina­ted against in terms of tenure, promotion, training, pay and other benefits.

“No vaccine, no work policy shall not be allowed,” the DOLE official stressed.

 ??  ??
 ?? EDD GUMBAN ?? A doctor at the Sta. Ana hospital in Manila holds up an ampoule of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine during an inoculatio­n of medical frontliner­s yesterday.
EDD GUMBAN A doctor at the Sta. Ana hospital in Manila holds up an ampoule of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine during an inoculatio­n of medical frontliner­s yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines