BAGUIO CITY – There were no new cases of COVID-19 here since Thursday.
Mayor Benjamin Magalong
said it has been 11 days since the city had its last confirmed COVID-19 case on
March 28, 2020.
If this trend
keeps up, the city can claim to have truly “flattened the curve” or reined in
the insidious disease, he added.
“Until then,
we should continue holding the line by sustaining our vigilance and not lapsing
into complacency,” Magalong said.
“This is our
11th day, but technically our 14th day without any COVID-19 positive case. Our
combined containment and control measures are working. But these favorable
development must not be replaced with complacency,” he said.
“We will
continue to close our borders except to those with essential travels,” Magalong
added.
“The 24-hour
curfew will continue to be in effect in the city. The city government will also
sustain mass testing of PUIs and select PUMs, enhance further contact tracing
through the use of technology and cognitive interviewing skills, mandate the
wearing of masks, maintain social distancing, and most importantly, keep
praying to the Lord for protection,” Magalong said.
“Discipline
is the key. We are being rewarded because this is the 11th day that no
confirmed case was recorded. Recoveries are rising while COVID-19 positive
cases are going down. Keep up the cooperation.”
The success
in maintaining a “zero new case,” he said, is due to the strong working link
between the city government, national line agencies led by the Department of
Health Cordillera and the Inter-Agency Task Force, and the private sector.
Magalong said
Baguio is doing good as far as COVID-19 control prevention is concerned.
Patients are
recovering and PUIs and PUMs are decreasing.
“I thank our
constituents for their cooperation. Their being disciplined is helping us fight
and control this virus. I also thank the barangay officials for their rigorous
approach in keeping their residents at home and the strict police
implementation of the window hour or market day and curfew hours,” Magalong
added.
He added that
the other factors that might have contributed to the city’s initial gains are
the early imposition of preventive measures like public health etiquette on
hand washing, cough and sneeze manners, cancellation of Panagbenga and
crowd-drawing events, cancellation of classes and imposition of community
quarantine, closure of borders, thermal scanning, sanitation tents, and the use
of technology in detection and in contact tracing.
There were
also the “out-of-box” solutions like deviations from protocols like the early
imposition of the wearing of masks, declaration of cases, and conduct of
contact tracing ahead of the confirmation of positive cases, and the patients’
identity disclosure that facilitated early detection and prevented further transmission.
As of April
6, the city has 390 PUIs under home isolation. Magalong gave
the signal to conduct rapid tests of health workers and Persons Under
Investigation (PUIs) confined at home with mild COVID-19 symptoms.
Magalong said
the city has around 400 donated kits which are enough to cover all PUIs under
home quarantine.
He gave the
signal for the rapid tests after consulting with government health
practitioners to further hasten the identification of those who are infected
and facilitate their treatment, isolation, and contact tracing.
PUIs with
mild symptoms who will test positive will be subjected to PCR confirmatory
tests while those with negative results will be made to continue their 14-day
quarantine.
City Health
Officer Dr. Rowena Galpo said 23 PUIs tested last April 4 yielded negative
results, while 36 others who were checked April 6, are still awaiting results.
Data from the
COVID-19 Monitoring Bulletin of the City Health Services Office showed the
significant decrease in the number of PUIs after the mass testing was
conducted.
As of April
8, a total of 14 persons have been identified and hospitalized in the city (5
admitted in hospital, 8 recovered, and 1 death). PUIs (9 in hospital, 251 in
home isolation, 244 recovered) with the total of 342 tested negative.
On April 7,
PUIs recorded were at 362 (home isolation), 16 (admitted in hospitals), and 314
tested negative.
Magalong also
extended class suspension in all levels until the end of May after a meeting on
Wednesday with representatives from the Department of Education and the
Commission on Higher Education.
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