The Philippine Star

DOH gearing for ‘endemic COVID’ status as cases drop

- By EDU PUNAY – With Romina Cabrera

The Department of Health (DOH) is gearing up for “endemic COVID-19” status even as the number of cases continues to drop.

“From pandemic to endemic COVID-19 response. It is better for us to expect that COVID-19 is not going away. It is wrong to think at this stage that COVID-19 will disappear,” Health Secretary Francisco Duque III said during the Laging Handa public briefing Tuesday.

“We will never be able to reach zero on this given the current data and available informatio­n. We have to live with it. We must accept that COVID-19 will be here to stay,” Duque added.

He said the endemic response is just similar to the pandemic response.

“Preparatio­ns for a pandemic are almost similar to the endemic status. We just need to continuous­ly enhance it when we shift to endemic for us to be able to contain it.”

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention defined endemic as the constant presence and/or usual prevalence of a disease or infectious agent in a population within a specific area.

When COVID-19 becomes endemic, Duque said, it is necessary for both the government and the people to enhance the response against the illness.

One response, he said, is to continue increasing the number of fully vaccinated individual­s.

Duque stressed the need for people to strictly adhere to minimum public health standards such as the use of disinfecta­nts, face shields and masks as well as observance of social distancing and proper cough etiquette.

He said the health system’s capacity in hospitals, temporary treatment centers and monitoring and quarantine facilities as well border control measures must be strengthen­ed.

Local government units (LGUs), Duque said, must continuous­ly improve contact tracing, detection, isolation and disease surveillan­ce.

Earlier, the DOH said it takes three to five years of intensive evaluation alongside the World Health Organizati­on before a disease can be classified as endemic.

To achieve this, health authoritie­s said an area needs to be observed for years and swab tests should be conducted on the general population.

Meanwhile, Metro Manila may be eligible to downgrade to the most lenient alert level if the downtrend in COVID cases continues, the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) said yesterday.

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