Manila Standard - 2021 March 3 - Wednesday

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SA variant spreads to PH

Six cases detected; DOH out to stop spread amid fears of adverse effect on vaccines

VOL. XXXV • NO. 21 • 3 SECTIONS 12 PAGES • P18 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 2021 • www.manilastandard.net • mst.daydesk@gmail.com

By Willie Casas and Macon Ramos-Araneta

T

HE government on Tuesday said it will try to swiftly contain the spread of the more transmissible COVID-19 variant from South Africa (B.1.351), which is said to affect vaccine efficacy, after six cases have been confirmed in the Philippines.

VAX FLEX. Manila Vice Mayor Honey Lacuna, Mayor Francisco ‘Isko’ Domagoso, City Health Officer Dr. Arnold Pangan, Sta. Ana Hospital Director Grace Padilla (from left), and other healthcare workers flex their arms after receiving Sinovac jabs against COVID-19 at the Sta. Ana Hospital on Tuesday. Manila was the first local government unit in the country to receive Sinovac vaccines from the National Task Force against COVID-19 on Monday. Norman Cruz

COVID-19 PH AT A GLANCE

(AS OF 4 PM MARCH 2)

580,442 TOTAL NUMBER OF CASES

2,067 33,610 NEW

ACTIVE

12,369

47

534,463

144

DEATHS

RECOVERIES

NEW

NEW

Vax drought: Rody can’t beg, steal, borrow By Vito Barcelo PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte admitted that the Philippines was having a hard time obtaining COVID-19 vaccines made in western countries, after rich nations bought the bulk of them. “There is no vaccine available— [whether] you beg, steal or pay for it,” Duterte said in a televised Monday night, noting that the Philippines wasn’t alone in its plight. “They’re having a hard time too. America has supplies but they’re scram-

bling for them,” he added. The Chief Executive earlier said the country would have to wait for the vaccines after 10 rich countries cornered 75 percent of the world’s supply of coronavirus vaccines. He said he was thankful to vaccine czar Carlito Galvez who managed to secure an initial suppl of vaccines from China. He also expressed appreciation to China for augmenting the country’s supply with a donation of 600,000 doses of vaccines developed by Sinovac. Meanwhile, the World Health Organization (WHO) representative to the Philippines said the delay in the

Duterte snipes at Robredo, opts for Sinopharm

Next page

KZ IN FIRST DISNEY SONG IN FILIPINO

Cebu, Davao receive 9,000 Sinovac doses By Willie Casas, Macon Ramos-Araneta, Joel E. Zurbano, and Maricel V. Cruz CEBU City and Davao City received Tuesday thousands of doses of Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine as the government ramped up its vaccination drive against the coronavirus disease. Some 7,200 doses of the Chinesemade anti-coronavirus jabs were delivered to the Vicente Sotto Memorial Medical Center in Cebu City where nearly 2,000 medical frontliners will be first inoculated. Meanwhile, some 12,000 vials of the Sinovac coronavirus vaccine were brought to Davao's Center for Health Development. According to Department of HealthDavao Region director Dr. Annabelle Yumang, about 8,000 health workers in Davao City and Tagum City would receive their first dose starting Friday at the Southern Philippines Medical Center. SPMC chief Ricardo Audan and Davao City health officer-in-charge Dr. Ashley Lopez will be among the first to be vaccinated in the south. Next page

By Vito Barcelo, Willie Casas and Macon Ramos-Araneta PRESIDENT Rodrigo Duterte is willing to be vaccinated by COVID-19 vaccine developed by pharmaceutical company Sinopharm as soon as the Food and Drug Administration approves the emergency use authorization to disprove Vice President Leni Robredo’s thinking that Duterte got the jab along with the members of the Presidential Security Group last year. Presidential Spokesperson Harry Roque made the remarks to defend Duterte from Robredo’s repeated call for the President to be inoculated with Sinovac. “The President will wait for the EUA’s approval because Sinopharm has applied for an EUA before the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Monday,” he said.

delivery of 525,600 doses of AstraZeneca vaccines was due to logistics, contrary to the claims of government officials who said there were supply issues. In an interview on CNN Philippines, WHO representative to the Philippines Dr. Rabindra Abeyasinghe said logistics handlers were having problems ensuring large shipments of vaccines across the world, given the cold chain requirements. The vaccines, done through the WHO’s COVAX Facility, were supposed to arrive Monday, but Health officials here said supply problems were the cause.

Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire said both the UK variant, known as B.1.1.7, and the South African variant were more transmissible than the original coronavirus strain, but the latter was of particular concern because it had a mutation that affects vaccine efficacy. She said this was called an “immune escape” that prevents the body’s immune system from responding to the infection. “This is why we want, as much as possible, fast containment of this variant so we can prevent further spread,” she said, speaking in Filipino. She added that the Department of Health (DOH) was still validating if there was local transmission of the South African variant in Pasay City. The DOH earlier reported the detection of six cases of the South African variant and 30 more cases of the UK variant and two additional cases “with mutations Next page of interest.”

FIST AND JAB. President Rodrigo Roa Duterte clenches his fist during a meeting with the Inter-Agency Task Force on the Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) core members at the Malacañang Golf Clubhouse in Manila on Monday night, even as a military health worker shows a Sinovac COVID-19 vaccine vial (inset) during the vaccination of military personnel at the army headquarters in Manila on Tuesday. AFP, Presidential Photo

‘Gaps’ prolong school year By Joel E. Zurbano and Macon Ramos-Araneta THE Department of Education has extended the school year for basic education to July 10, 2021 through DepEd Order No. 012, s. 2021 which amended the school calendar for 2020 to 2021. The department declared an inter-

vention and remediation week from March 1 to 12 to address learning gaps among students and to give time to teachers for the different learning delivery modalities. In a statement, the department said it identified a need to address learning gaps in order to “meet the required essential learning competencies.” Next page

PhilHealth, NBI go after fraudsters ENTERTAINMENT / C3

THE Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth) recently forged an agreement with the country’s leading investigating authority National Bureau of Investigation to go after illicit activities that are potentially defrauding the Nation-

al Health Insurance Program. The parties have agreed on a shared set of responsibilities to detect, deter, and prosecute fraud committed by health care facilities and professionals, and even Next page

SUPERVISED. Marikina Mayor Marcy Teodoro (left) and vaccine czar Carlito Galvez Jr. (2nd from left) peer over the shoulder of a frontline health worker receiving A COVID-19 vaccine during its first rollout in Marikina City on Tuesday. Health workers were the first to receive the Sinovac jab from China. Manny Palmero


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