As of
4 p.m. today, the Philippines reports 538 new cases of confirmed corona virus
cases –so far the highest jump in a day. There are now 2,084 confirmed
corona virus cases in the country, including 49 recoveries and 88 deaths.
Days
before this, Department of Health (DoH) Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire had
prepared us for an “artificial rise” in the number of cases as the department
improved its testing capacity and reduced its backlog with the addition of more
testing laboratories and the arrival of testing kits from other countries.
Since
the outbreak began, only the DoH’s Research Institute for Tropical Medicine
(RITM) in Muntinlupa has been testing samples of COVID-19. This function was extended on March 19, 2020 to five subnational laboratories that
were cleared as testing centers by the World Health Organization (WHO).
These
are the Baguio General Hospital and Medical Center in Baguio City; San Lazaro
Hospital in Manila City; University of the Philippines National Institutes of
Health, Manila; Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center in Cebu City; and
Southern Philippines Medical Center in Davao City.
Also, some
168,000 test kits have arrived in the Philippines: a donation of 100,000 from China and 43,000
from Singapore, and an importation of 25,000 from South Korea.
The
Philippines can now run 1,000 tests per day from the previous daily average of
300, said Health Secretary Francisco Duque last March 30.
Today,
National Task Force (NTF) COVID-19 chief implementer, Peace Process Secretary
Carlito Galvez Jr. says there are plans to carry out “massive testing” of
persons under monitoring (PUM) and persons under investigation (PUI) for COVID-19,
as well as health workers on the front lines of battling the pandemic.
Widespread
testing is crucial in the fight against the pandemic as it allows health
authorities to isolate and treat infected people.
However,
the country is only just now gaining traction in terms of equipping itself to
fight the disease on the medical front. Aside from increasing testing centers
and acquiring more test kits, our health authorities also need qualified
testing personnel.
This
is just about testing. There’s a host of other problems regarding treatment
that range from overflowing hospitals, lack of hospital equipment, lack of
personal protective gear for health frontliners, etc.
So,
testing…1, 2, 3. We’ve just stepped up
to the mike. We aren’t singing yet.