Baguio new lockdown rule
>> Wednesday, August 12, 2020
CITY HALL BEAT
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY –
Mayor Benjamin Magalong said a new lockdown rule prohibiting even
workers from going in and out of barangays undergoing contact tracing for a
maximum of 48 hours is necessary to limit the movement of people who might have
come in contact with the confirmed Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) and interrupt
transmission of the virus.
"Please
understand and allow us to do our work. Contact tracing is a crucial
component of our fight against COVID-19 and your cooperation is a must," the
mayor appealed.
The mayor last July 30 issued a memorandum spelling out the lockdown
procedures for contact tracing which included a 48-hour time-out within which
contact tracing teams accomplish their job and eventually determine the extent
of the lockdown.
During said period, only the following will be allowed movement:
barangay officials, health care and social workers, uniformed personnel,
emergency response service providers, cargo and logistics services, government
workers with essential functions, persons authorized by the barangays to
procure essential needs, workers in utilities like water, electricity,
telecommunications and waste management and members of the media.
The 48-hour time frame allows contact tracing teams to complete their
mission of tracking down contacts of positive patients and allowing people
including workers to go in and out while it is being undertaken would defeat
the purpose.
Within 48 hours and in most cases even less, the teams interview the
patient, cull information on his/her whereabouts; identify and classify those
he/she had been with; track and inform the contacts; facilitate testing
isolation and quarantine protocols; and expedite the analytics using the
computerized contact tracing tool to identify further links of the patients.
Once
they have a full grasp of the situation, the teams can recommend whether to
expand or limit the coverage of the lockdown to a certain area.
Lifting of lockdown orders will only be done upon
the recommendation of the teams after ensuring that all contact tracing
activities have been completed, the mayor said.
***
This, as Magalong said he was counting on city
residents to remain calm and cooperative amid the continued surge in
Coronavirus disease (COVID-19 cases in the city.
"Our people do not have to be afraid. They just have to
be careful. They have to make sure that they are aware of what is going on and
that is the reason why we are very transparent by informing them every day
about the new cases so they would know and be aware of what they have to
do," the mayor said.
The mayor assured that the city government knows what is happening on
the ground and is acting on it as the situation warrants.
He said the increased number of cases which ballooned by 91 from July 24
to August 7 was a result of aggressive testing and contact tracing and the
number is expected to continue to swell as COVID response operations continue.
As of press time August 7, the city has a total of
152 cases with four deaths.
He said that the COVID-19 is not likely to go away in the near future
and so people have to learn to live with it. "We have to learn to co-exist
with it," the mayor said.
He asked residents to observe the minimum health standards: wear masks
properly and at all times, wash hands, observe proper hygiene, follow physical
distancing, avoid closed, crowded spaces and close-up conversations and limit
going out of their homes to essential needs.
"For the next two weeks, please stay home and avoid travels unless
absolutely necessary. And please sustain all our health protocols,
too. It's the best we can do to safeguard ourselves and our
families," the mayor appealed.
He also urged workers to avoid using common utensils for eating or
drinking as this practice is now being looked into as a possible cause of the
case outbreak in one sector.
"Please avoid sharing utensils. This would become part of our new
normal practices including banning the use of a common shotglass in drinking
sprees when we decide to lift the liquor ban again. Please do not revert
to this dangerous practice," he said.
***
After embarking on an aggressive sectoral testing
and increased case management for COVID-19, the city is again faced with the
problem on the dwindling supply of Reverse Transcription Polymerase Chain React
Test (RT-PCR)test kits.
Mayor Magalong who since the start of the quarantine had worked out the
procurement of the test kit donation and supplies, both swab and Rapid
Diagnotics Test, said he might just have to try his luck again for more
donations. Otherwise, the city will be forced to use its own funds this time.
City Health Services Officer Dr. Rowena Galpo said from the 40,000 kits
procured by the mayor, the city is now down to 19,000 which is not much if the
surge in cases continues.
The mayor said that for now the city will have to manage the remaining
kits while he tries to obtain more.
But if the city decides to continue its risk-based mass testing to
identify more carriers, then it may have to resort to a puchase, albeit it will
have to wait for the cheapest lot to save on cost.
Still, purchasing test kits will not be sustainable because the city has
to manage its resources amid the health crisis.
"We cannot go on testing forever especially since we know that this
crisis might last until the end of 2021," the mayor said.
He said that faced with meager test kits, he might have to resort to
zonal lockdown or quarantine system where in the event of clustering of cases,
the entire barangay or purok will be declared as critical spot and will be put
on a lockdown and residents on quarantine for 14 days.
"It's either we test them or quarantine them for two weeks,"
he said.
Galpo said the city conducts an average of
462 RDT tests and 75 RDT per day at present.
As of August 4, it has undertaken a total of 33,970 PCR and RDT tests
which the mayor said is already high when compared to the other cities and even
regions.
However, one problem is that the test is only "good as the day a
person was tested" because he remains vulnerable to the virus even after
testing negative of it, the mayor added.
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