LETTERS FROM THE AGNO
March L. Fianza
BAGUIO CITY -- At least nine doctors who have been in the forefront in
fighting the novel corona virus since the World Health Organization declared
COVID-19 a pandemic, died. This should be ample reason for all frontliners to
be given adequate personal protective equipment (PPE) to be able to fight the
novel corona virus, an unseen killer.
In the meantime, while medical workers and professionals in the
frontlines go to the hospitals to perform their duties, everybody else should
help them by staying at home.
The best thing to do now is to rally behind
government and our medical and security frontliners who are fighting hard to
defeat an invisible killer. The situation in the weeks to come is likely to
worsen because hundreds of nurses and doctors are now quarantined which in
effect, reduced the already dwindling workforce of the hospitals.
And as I begin writing this, the DOH confirms that
their very own Sec. Francisco Duque is under home quarantine because he has
been tested for COVID-19 but is currently asymptomatic. The DOH said, Sec.
Duque has asthma and hypertension.
Hopefully, the prediction that some private
hospitals will temporarily close operations due to the decreasing number of
medical workers and lack of personal protective equipment will not come true.
In a rush to address the medical crisis, the House
of Representatives adopted a Senate bill to grant President Rodrigo Duterte
special powers to purchase essential medical supplies such as PPE, open
quarantine centers, goods and services.
The House passed HB No. 6616 that would allow
President Duterte to declare a national emergency in the middle of the rapid
spike of COVID-19 cases in the country, including fast-tracking of testing for
persons under investigation and monitoring (PUIs and PUMs).
Amid the increase of COVID-19 cases, celebrities
such as entertainers and musicians all over, including government officials
were not spared by a disease that exempts no one.
The latest Philippine official to be hit was
Senator Sonny Angara who announced on March 26 that he has tested positive. He
is the third senator to become infected with COVID-19, after Senate Majority
Leader Juan Miguel Zubiri and Senator Koko Pimentel III.
Zubiri who was asymptomatic said he didn't know how
he got the deadly virus, while Senator Koko Pimentel III said he took the test
on March 20 and was informed about the result late Tuesday, March 24.
COVID-19 did not spare police frontliners as two
cops tested positive also last March 25. Earlier, a personnel at the Manila
Police District and another from the PNP Chaplain Service tested positive.
Within the military, Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) officials
admitted that a couple recently travelled overseas and were tested positive
here.
In the U.S. of A., “Running on Empty” singer-composer
Jackson Browne, 71, also tested positive for coronavirus but
claimed that his symptoms so far have been mild.
When asked about his reaction to President Trump’s
response to the disease, Jackson Browne said “how can you take this
administration seriously when they’re all at these press conferences, standing
close together, touching the microphone, shaking hands and patting each other
on the back?”
“How can you help but think, why should I listen to
these guys,” he added. Exactly, this demonstrates why the spike of COVID-19
cases in the US increased rapidly. It is because the threat of the virus was
taken for granted.
The other prominent figures that were stricken by the corona virus were
Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, wife of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau; Prince
Charles, actor Tom Hanks and partner Rita Wilson, Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert,
and more than 20 others.
In Baguio, there was concern for colleagues in the
media who were always out in the field to cover events related to the crisis,
interview personalities or attend press meetings and placing themselves at risk
in the process.
Many of us do not have the benefit of private motor vehicles and that
adds to the threat against one media person’s life as operations of public
utility vehicles were all suspended to stop people from going out of their
homes.
I was thinking, there must be a way for the press
to perform its role without having to go through the risk, or work without
going out of the house. In this case, the photographers, of course, have to be
on site physically.
Media persons are aware that they have a role to perform in helping
resolve emergencies. But doing their jobs is made difficult by situations, both
natural and man-made.
Amid the confusion and discoordination in law
enforcement, I do hope that no one from the media who is out in the fields gets
hit by the COVID-19. Imagine what could happen to a world without news
coverage.
In the middle of a suspended travel, I see people
crowding in checkpoints and barangay halls applying for permits in order to
reach their destinations, which to me defeats the purpose of physical
distancing.
As the story deepens, people come to know more
about the corona virus that can be passed to others even before they themselves
get the symptoms. That is why COVID-19 is not that easy to kill.
But that makes one understand why an effective way
of killing the corona virus is to stop people from mingling in crowds, honesty
and a lot of common sense. And treat yourself as if you are positive with
COVID-19.
On the other hand, people further come across questions such as: if
reinfection is possible with the corona virus and will the pandemic be seasonal
since the hot summer has just set in?
If the answer to these questions is “yes” then
there is a big possibility that we may have to continue with community
quarantines and live with social distancing for years to come to prevent people
from dying, especially if no drug to kill COVID-19 is discovered.
So far, it has been explained that the virus is
passed through droplets from coughing or sneezing, although there are certainly
other unknown modes of transmission.
And to fight it is to keep reminding ourselves to
observe the do’s and don’ts such as washing the hands often for at least 20
seconds, covering the mouth when coughing or sneezing with a tissue then
throwing the tissue in the trash, and by staying home.
The don’ts are simply don’t touch your face, don’t
travel if you have a fever and cough, and don’t wear a face mask if you are
well.
COVID-19 like the ordinary cough and colds might
become a disease that will never disappear so that even while we want this to
end sooner, the fight may not be over tomorrow, next month or beyond.
Meanwhile, let us face the fact that COVID-19 will be with us for a
length of time we do not know.
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