VOL. XXXV • NO. 04 • 2 SECTIONS 8 PAGES • P18 • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2021 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com
FOR GOOD LUCK.Not minding the cold weather and the fog, a woman happily strolled around the EMV Flower Farm in Indang, Cavite, surrounded by sunflowers in full bloom. Sunflowers – bright and cheery as the sun itself, are said to symbolize happiness and loyalty. JR Josue
Govt readies indemnity fund
Hospitalization, other compensation for adverse vaccine reactions covered By Joyce Pangco Pañares
COVID-19 PH AT A GLANCE
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HE government will compensate those who will develop adverse reactions to COVID-19 vaccines, the Department of Health said yesterday.
(AS OF 4 PM FEB. 13)
547,255 TOTAL NUMBER OF CASES
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133
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COMELEC SETS ‘22 POLL SCHED QC RESUMES BAN ON PLASTIC BAGS
COCKROACHES (LIKE LOVE) LAST FOREVER
Health Undersecretary Rosario Vergeire made the clarification yesterday in a radio interview after the delivery of Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine doses was delayed for a week over the lack of an indemnification law. “All of the manufacturers want an indemnification agreement. They do not want to be charged of any case because their products are still under development,” Vergeire said. “It will be the government (who will compensate). If, for example, a person
develops a reaction and has to be hospitalized, this will be covered by the government through PhilHealth,” she added. The Pfizer deliver due Friday was part of the procurement from COVAX, the globally-pooled vaccine procurement and distribution effort co-led by the World Health Organization and the GAVI Alliance. Vaccine czar Secretary Carlito Galvez Jr. has been calling on Congress to pass an indemnification law, which he
year, which account for about 60 percent of the population which is the volume that experts said needed to inoculated to achieve herd immunity. Some 50,000 Filipinos are expected to be vaccinated this month. Galvez said the one-week delay in the mass rollout will not substantially impact on the government’s vaccination plan. Meanwhile, the Food and Drug Administration said people with heart conditions can still receive the vaccine. “Right now, the only ones who are barred from getting the jab are those who have severe allergies to the vaccine contents,” FDA chief Enrique Domingo said. “If you are too frail or too weak, we can hold the vaccine. But for those with stable diseases, they can still get vaccinated,” he added.
NCR mayors buck cinema, arcade reopening Experts warn By Willie Casas
LOCAL ROUNDUP
METRO Manila mayors will appeal to the government to reconsider its directive to allow the reopening of cinemas and video arcades in areas under general community quarantine on Feb. 15, Parañaque City Mayor Edwin Olivarez said in a radio interview on Saturday. “We have reservations. We will likely appeal to the Inter-Agency Task Force on the reopening of cinemas,” said Olivarez, who is also the chairman of the Metro Manila Council. He said he already spoke with Metropolitan Manila Development Authority chairman Benhur Abalos to manifest the objection of the Metro Manila mayors given that cinemas are enclosed, air-conditioned spaces where moviegoers will gather for more than an hour. “We are also apprehensive over the reopening video game arcades because these are enclosed spaces plus we are
not yet allowing minors to go outdoors,” Olivarez said. The government only allows persons between the ages of 18 to 65 in Metro Manila, which remains under General Community Quarantine, to leave their homes. Make policies based on data The OCTA Research group on Saturday urged government to adopt policies based on data as quaratine restrictions have been eased. Dr. Butch Ong of the OCTA Research group said the government must observe trends in infection spread, particularly in Metro Manila, which the group considers as the virus epicenter. “With the balance of more health care workers and the entry of new variants which are more transmissible, we neer
BIOPHILIC DESIGN FOR WORKPLACES ROSES rot, chocolate is a bit cliché, but cockroaches are forever! So assures the Bronx Zoo in New York, which for this Valentine’s Day is offering to name a Madagascar hissing cockroach after your significant other...or your ex. “You don’t always have the right words, but you can give him or her goosebumps. Name a cockroach for your Valentine, because cockroaches...are forever,” assures the zoo’s successful campaign, now a decade old. AFP
said is required by vaccine manufacturers. Pending the passage of the said law, Galvez said the government has submitted a draft indemnity clause to the WHO and GAVI Alliance. “Various concerned units of the government are now discussing how to go about this indemnification. But definitely, government will be supporting and assisting all those who will have reactions to these vaccines,” Vergeire said. She said the compensation will cover not just hospitalization. “There will be other forms of indemnification, not just for hospitalization. We are just working on this and looking at our source of funds,” the Health official added. The government targets to inoculate 50 to 70 million individuals within the
The design that is intrinsically connected to our love for nature has emerged as one of the most highly recommended office styles in the fit-out sector.
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to be more vigilant... We still consider the National Capital Region as the epicenter so we need to make policies and base these on data and evidence and our previous experience with COVID last year,” Ong said. More UK variant cases recorded The Department of Health late Friday said 19 new infections of the more contagious UK variant of the novel coronavirus have been recorded, bringing the total number of cases of the mutated strain in the country to 44. Three of the patients were from Davao Region — a 10-year-old boy, a 54-year-old female, and a 33-year-old male. Two were detected in Calabarzon while eight infected patients were returning overseas Filipinos. The DOH said it is still verifying if the remaining six patients are local cases or returning overseas Filipinos as well.
BIEBER MARKS V-DAY WITH TIKTOK FIRSTS Canadian pop superstar Justin Bieber is celebrating Valentine’s Day in historymaking style, teaming up with TikTok for a series of firsts: the first-ever longform concert event in TikTok history and Justin’s first time performing his fan-favorite 2013 album JOURNALS live from his house.
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COVID-19 may last indefinitely
THE head of the EU’s disease control agency warned the novel coronavirus could last indefinitely even as global infections slowed by nearly half in the last month and vaccine rollouts gathered pace in parts of the world. In an interview, ECDC chief Andrea Ammon urged European countries in particular not to drop their guard against a virus that “seems very well adapted to humans” and may require experts to tweak vaccines over time, as is the case with the seasonal flu. “So we should be prepared that it will remain with us,” according to Ammon, head of the Stockholm-based European Center for Disease Prevention and Control. After the latest harsh wave of a pandemic that started in China more than a year ago, glimmers of hope flickered as an AFP database showed the rate of new Covid-19 infections has slowed by 44.5 percent worldwide over the past month. More than 107 million people have been infected worldwide and nearly 2.4 million have died from COVID-19. But disease experts warned that vaccines won’t end the pandemic unless all countries receive doses in a fast and fair manner. Writing in an open letter published in the Lancet medical journal, the authors said with vaccine stockpiling in wealthier countries, “it could be years before the coronavirus is brought under control at a global level.” AFP
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