(Part of an ongoing account
started on March 13, 2020 of how the spread of COVID-19 in our country and our government’s
response has affected our lives.)
March
31, 2020
National Task Force (NTF) COVID-19 chief
implementer, Peace Process Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. says the government is preparing to carry out “massive
testing” of persons under monitoring (PUM) and persons under investigation
(PUI) for the novel coronavirus, as well as health workers on the front lines
of battling the pandemic. On April 2, he sets the target date for the start of the testing on April 14.
April
1, 2020
Hungry
protest
Residents of Sitio San Roque in Barangay Bagong Pag-asa,
Quezon City take to the streets to protest a lack of supplies, saying they have
yet to receive food packs since the lockdown started March 17.
Twenty-one people are arrested by Quezon City police and face
multiple charges. Bail is set at P15,000. On April 3, Frankie Pangilinan tweets
she will sponsor bail for one. The daughter of Senator Francis Pangilinan and
“Megastar” Sharon Cuneta follows it up with another tweet, saying her parents
will pay bail for the remaining 20.
That night, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte accuses
leftist groups of stirring
public sentiment against the government during the coronavirus crisis and warns
them that if they cause trouble or put lives in danger, he wouldn't hesitate to
order authorities to "shoot them dead."
Free
coronavirus treatment
The Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) says
it will continue to cover expenses of patients with coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) until April 14.
#ProtectVico
National Bureau of Investigation
(NBI) Deputy Director Ferdinand Lavin announces they have summoned Pasig City Mayor Vico Sotto "for disobeying national government policies or directives in
imposing quarantines." #ProtectVico tops the Twitter trending topic
worldwide shortly after.
Interior and Local Government
Undersecretary Jonathan Malaya calls the NBI’s invitation to Sotto “a useless,
political distraction.” He cites Justice
Menardo Guevarra who points out that Vico’s alleged violation of the Bayanihan
Act was done prior to the passage of the Bayanihan Act.
Vico already cooperated with the
DILG and banned the use of tricycles as public transportation in compliance
with IATF guidelines on March 19, days before the Bayanihan Act was signed into
law on March 24.
April 2, 2020
Longer hours
The Inter-Agency Task Force (IATF) on the management of emerging infectious diseases urges all supermarkets, pharmacies, and other similar establishments to
operate up to 12 hours to give residents more time to purchase essential goods.
The IATF also suggests scheduled market days per sector, barangay, or purok
among other possible solutions to people spending long hours outside their
homes when they should be on home quarantine.
Face masks required
Luzon residents are now required to wear face masks
or improvised face shields when leaving their homes to work or buy essential
goods. They can use “earloop masks, indigenous, reusable or do-it-yourself
masks, face shields, handkerchiefs, or such other protective equipment that can
effectively lessen the transmission of COVID-19,” says Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles, who also speaks for the IATF.
National
Quarantine Centers
Nograles says the Philippine
International Convention Center and the Ninoy Aquino Stadium inside the Rizal
Memorial Sports Complex will be fully functional by April 10 while the World
Trade Center will be ready by April 12.
These
national quarantine centers are being set up to decongest hospitals overwhelmed
with the rising number of COVID-19 cases. They are being retrofitted to separately house patients with milder symptoms and
potential carriers awaiting tests or test results.
Others also being eyed as quarantine facilities are: Quezon
Institute; Duty-Free Philippines, ParaƱaque; Amoranto Stadium in Quezon City; Quezon
Memorial Circle and Veterans Memorial Medical Center complex. Bases and
Conversion Development Authority President and chief executive officer Vince
Dizon says the cost of setting up the quarantine facilities were shouldered by
private partners.
On April 4, the Iglesia ni Cristo (INC) agrees to let
the government use its Ciudad de Victoria estate as a quarantine facility. The 75-hectare complex in Bocaue, Bulacan includes the
Philippine Arena, the Philippine Sports Stadium, and several other facilities
that can house patients and medical staff. Once readied, the whole complex will
have an estimated 1,065 rooms for patients, while frontliners will be able to
share 476 suites good for 2 to 4 health workers each.
No Competition
President Rodrigo Duterte sacks Presidential
Anti-Corruption Commission (PACC) Commissioner Manuelito Luna for issuing a
statement that the NBI should investigate Vice
President Leni Robredo for "competing" with the national government. He says that Robredo’s efforts to
help frontliners “compete with, or are calculated to undermine, National Government
efforts in this time of public health emergency or national calamity."
"As of this moment, he's no longer connected
with government," Duterte says in a late night speech.
April
3, 2020
U.P. Test Kits
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) approves the test kits developed by the
University of the Philippines-National Institute of Health (UP-NIH).
The Department of Science and Technology (DOST) says Manila HealthTek Inc. will prioritize
for manufacturing 1,300 test kits funded by the DOST and the UP National
Institutes of Health project that can accommodate 26,000 tests.
These will be distributed to the following hospitals
from April 4 to 25: Philippine General Hospital, Manila; Makati Medical Center;
The Medical City, Pasig City; Baguio General Hospital; Vicente Sotto Memorial
Medical Center, Cebu City; and Southern Philippines Medical Center, Davao City.
Other hospitals may buy UP NIH test
kits for the second rollout, which could process 94,000 tests. Each costs around P1,300 per
kit, which is cheaper than those being sold in hospitals at around P8,000.
Rapid Pass
The
“RapidPassPH” System is introduced. The system aims to address heavy queuing,
while minimizing human contact between those passing through and those manning
the checkpoints. The system, which uses QR code-based technology to speed up
the entry of frontliners and the delivery of essential goods like food and
medicine, is scheduled for rollout on April 6, initially in 56 checkpoints in
Metro Manila.
April 4, 2020
Parameters
The (IATF) says
the decision on a possible extension, as well as the partial or total lifting
of the Luzon-wide enhanced community quarantine depends on the following:
- Trends
in the COVID-19 epidemiological curve, which include, among others, the
doubling time, acceleration, or deceleration of new cases;
- Capacity
of the health care system, which includes, among others, the number and
availability of quarantine, isolation, and treatment facilities; the capability
to mount contact tracing; availability of Personal Protective Equipment (PPEs)
to frontliners, and the testing capacity of the country;
- Social
factors;
- Economic
factors; and
- Security
factors
Discrimination vs. frontliners
The
IATF warns that acts of discrimination inflicted upon healthcare workers, OFWs,
COVID-19 cases, whether confirmed or suspected, recovered or undergoing
treatment, as well as patients under investigation and persons under monitoring
“will be dealt with criminally, civilly, and/or administratively.” The task
force also urges local government units to issue executive orders or enact
ordinances “prohibiting and penalizing these discriminatory acts.”
Intellectual
Liar
In a late night speech, President Duterte lashes out at
human rights lawyer Chel Diokno for taking on as client, one of those being investigated by the NBI for taking to social media and posting about the "alleged misuse of government
funds" related to the response to contain the spread of the coronavirus.
The President mocks Diokno’s failed senatorial bid, poking fun at his
appearance, and calling him an "intellectual liar."
Salary
aid
A
majority of Cabinet members have pledged to voluntarily donate 75 percent of
their monthly salary to aid the government’s fight against the COVID-19, says
Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles.
April 5, 2020
Chinese
doctors
Medical
experts from China arrive in the Philippines to assist and advise the
Philippine government on efforts to address the outbreak of the COVID-19. The
12-man medical team seeks to provide technical advice on epidemic prevention
and control, as well as share medical treatment experience.
DoH
update: As of 4 p.m. of April 5, 2020, the Philippines has reported 3,246
confirmed corona virus cases, including 64 recoveries and 152 deaths.