The Philippine Star

A4 and vaccinatio­n

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Based on the government’s prioritiza­tion for vaccinatio­n, A1 to A3 covers healthcare workers, senior citizens, and persons with comorbidit­y, while the A4 covers frontline personnel in essential sectors including transporta­tion workers such as bus drivers, conductors, MRT personnel, jeepney drivers, etc.

Given that mobility and transporta­tion are the key components of the economy and basically, of how we live on a day-to-day basis, it is not much of an argument that transport workers should be on the priority list for vaccinatio­n from the COVID-19 virus.

The fact, though, is that with little of the vaccines that are available for the first three tiers on the list, we do not see many of our transporta­tion brothers and sisters receiving the vaccine in the weeks, or maybe months, to come.

It is noteworthy to consider at this point the latest initiative of the Quezon City government to highlight this need on the part of transporta­tion workers. They are actually out there in the streets, on person-to-person contact with the general populace and who, if infected by the virus, could be by themselves virus spreaders in land, sea and air. Last May 1 or Labor Day, the QC government set up a drivethru COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site for transport workers with the aim to vaccinate over 200 tricycle drivers and food delivery riders.

According to QC Mayor Joy Belmonte, “Our objective is to expedite vaccinatio­n because they ferry people every-day. To make it faster, they can just pass through and get vaccinated. They do not need to wait one and a half hours. It will not be operationa­l the whole time. If a certain number of transport drivers are booked for a certain day, once we allow the A4 category to get vaccinated, then we will activate the drive-through.”

As the good mayor said, the vaccinatio­n of a handful of transport workers is an expression of the city’s ambition to get the city’s transport workers vaccinated once the A4 category is opened by the COVID-19 Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF). I would like to commend the mayor’s initiative, though symbolic at this point, but something that the rest of Metro Manila mayors and local government unit (LGU) executives throughout the country should also take note.

In a related matter, Mayor Joy also announced that Quezon City will allow the private sector to use the COVID-19 vaccines allocated by the national government so that private companies can tap their own doctors and nurses in vaccinatin­g their employees. She said that in her initial talks with the private sector, “we found out that a lot of these corporatio­ns have their own doctors, nurses, and while we are not yet vaccinatin­g A4s, we are vaccinatin­g until A3, eventually we will move to essential workers,” she said in a television interview.

I think that Mayor Joy hit the nail on the head when she reached out to the private sector regarding the upscaling of vaccinatio­n among the general population which is the only way the country can really take control of the spread of the virus which is currently still on the rampage.

Involving the private sector is the key in the success of the vaccinatio­n drive by the Biden administra­tion in the United States which has jabbed about half of the US population in the first 100 days of President Joe Biden’s inaugurati­on as the 46th US President.

In the US, companies and private institutio­ns such as nursing homes, clinics and hospitals as well as pharmaceut­icals such as Walgreens Company, CVS Health, Walmart and Rite Aid Corp have been mobilized to get the vaccines into the arms of Americans. The question is: how come the IATF has not thought of that? And here is our QC mayor initiating the discussion which should be happening at the highest levels of government months ago.

Without doubt, we have in the Philippine­s long establishe­d and internatio­nally recognized pharmaceut­icals such as Zuellig, Mercury Drug, United Laboratori­es, Makati Medical Center, etc., that should have played more prominent roles in the country’s vaccinatio­n drive. That vaccinatio­n has remained solely in the hands of IATF and through the LGU’s have constricte­d our ability to procure the vaccine, to distribute it in huge numbers and to apply it in the most efficaciou­s and speedy manner to the masses of our people.

To date, there have been 1,809,801 individual­s vaccinated against COVID-19 in the country, nearly two months since the government rolled out its vaccinatio­n program. Or about 900,000 vaccine jabs on people’s arms a month. The government aims to inoculate 70 million Filipinos to reach herd immunity.

At the rate things are going under the present system, it will take about 77 months for the government to reach its target or about six years from now—in 2027. In the meanwhile, hunker down and keep yourself safe—until the country is vaccinated.

TO DATE, THERE HAVE BEEN 1,809,801 FILIPINOS VACCINATED AGAINST COVID-19, NEARLY TWO MONTHS SINCE THE GOVERNMENT ROLLED OUT ITS VACCINATIO­N PROGRAM. THE GOVERNMENT AIMS TO INOCULATE 70 MILLION FILIPINOS TO REACH HERD IMMUNITY. AT THIS RATE, IT WILL TAKE 77 MONTHS FOR THE GOVERNMENT TO REACH ITS TARGET—IN 2027.

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