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75k cases in 3 months unless... Timely cure stems community spread, health exec warns By Macon Ramos-Araneta
W
ITHOUT appropriate interventions, the number of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases in the Philippines may spike to 75,000 in three months, Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire warned Wednesday.
As of noon on March 18, the number of confirmed positive COVID-19 cases in the Philippines stood at 202, with 17 deaths and 7 recovered patients, the Department of Health said in a statement. Vergeire said the 75,000 figure was based on the “modelling estimate” made by Filipino and World Health Organization experts and epidemiologists in the country. “And they were saying that (COVID-19 cases) would reach 75,000 if we will not put appropriate interventions. So we are trying to forecast to properly respond,” she added. Vergeire is also optimistic authorities “can flatten this curve.” “We can prevent the peak with this number. So this means we can spread this across many months if only we can implement stringent measures like social distancing,” she noted. Next page
MARCHING ON. Filipino medical interns wear masks to guard against infection as they step outside a hospital in Manila. AFP
FRONTLINE HEROES
VOL. XXXIV • NO. 39 • 2 SECTIONS 12 PAGES • P18 THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2020 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
Medical interns won't go home Joy puts 2 QC villages under 'extreme quarantine' even off-duty LOCAL ROUNDUP By Rio N. Araja, Willie Casas and Macon Ramos-Araneta
OVER 100 unpaid medical interns assigned to the Philippine General Hospital have volunteered to go back on duty to help patients and health workers despite being ordered to go home. The University of the Philippines, which manages the PGH, in a statement said the Association of Philippine Medical Colleges had ordered all medical interns working at various hospitals in the National Capital Region to be pulled off duty. But the ones assigned at PGH stayed behind, Coconuts Manila reported. As of Tuesday night, eight people being monitored for coronavirus were being treated at the PGH, while 34 have been sent home. Responding to the news, UP said it “salutes the hard work and bayanihan [camaraderie] spirit among the frontliners, health workers, and medical professionals in the country’s battle against COVID-19.” Next page
WORLD ROUNDUP
China stirs to life from virus stupor SHANGHAI—Restaurants are reopening, traffic and factories are stirring, and in one of the clearest signs yet that China is awakening from its coronavirus coma, the country’s “dancing aunties” are once again gathering in parks and squares. As the rest of the world runs for cover, China—where the virus first emerged—is moving, guardedly, in the opposite direction as domestic infections fall to nil following unprecedented lockdowns and travel restrictions. But ordinary life is far from normal. Masks and temperature checks are essential to enter most places and many eateries are banning diners from facing each other in a mass “social distancing” campaign—no easy task in the world’s most populous nation. In other developments: Underestimated magnitude In Brussels, political leaders “underestimated” the magnitude of the danger Next page
AT LEAST two villages in Quezon City have been placed under “extreme lockdown” and some hospitals under “facility quarantine” starting 6 a.m. Thursday as the number of novel coronavirus (COVID-19) cases continue to rise. Quezon City Mayor Joy Belmonte said as of Wednesday afternoon, there were 29 COVID-19 cases in the city. Those placed under “extreme lockdown” were barangays Tandang Sora and Kalusugan, while hospitals under “facility quarantine” were East Avenue Medical Center, Philippine Heart Center,
National Kidney and Transplant Institute, St. Luke’s Medical Center and Quirino Memorial Medical Center. Karl Michael Marasigan, the city’s Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office chief, said checkpoints and surveillance teams have been set up in the two villages under extreme lockdown. Residents in the affected barangays will not be allowed to leave their homes and nobody will be allowed to enter as well. Next page
Mayor Joy Belmonte
PH gets WB aid to fight disease By Julito G. Rada, Rey E. Requejo, Maricel V. Cruz, Macon Ramos-Araneta and Willie Casas THE World Bank said Wednesday it has committed $100 million (about P5.15 billion) in aid to the Philippines to fight the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. In a statement, the Department of Finance said the amount would enable the Department of Health to procure personal protective equipment for health care workers, along with testing and laboratory materials, quarantine areas, isolation rooms and other essential equipment to contain the spread of the disease. The funds under the World Bank’s Fast Track COVID-19 Facility can be made available to the DOH in a matter of weeks. At the direction of Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III, a team led by Next page
Gov't lifts deadline for departing pax By Vito Barcelo, Joel E. Zurbano, Rio N. Araja and Rey E. Requejo THE Bureau of Immigration has lifted the 72-hour travel window for departing overseas Filipino workers, balikbayan, and foreign nationals, Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles said Wednesday. Immigration Commissioner Jaime Morente said foreign nationals may now leave anytime during the community quarantine period, unless their flights have been canceled by the airlines or the Civil Aeronautics Board. Morente also said balikbayan and OFWs are allowed to depart as well. Departing Filipino tourists, however, are still not allowed to depart. Morente added that previously imposed travel restrictions for arriving passengers still remain in effect. As of Wednesday, 79 international flights were inbound to all terminals in Next page
GROCERY DISTANCING. Shoppers stand apart even on the sidewalk to follow social distancing measures while queueing outside a supermarket in Manila on Tuesday. President Rodrigo Duterte ordered about half the country's population to stay home for the next month in a drastic bid on Monday to curb the rising number of new coronavirus cases. AFP
COVID-themed cyberattacks
Monkey, banana: Curative remedy?
WASHINGTON—It may look like an email from a supervisor with an attachment on the new “work from home policy.” But it could be a cleverly designed scheme to hack into your network. The abrupt move of millions of people
SCIENTISTS who infected monkeys with the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 have found that those that recovered developed effective immunity from the disease—a potentially important discovery in the race to develop a vaccine. Next page
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