Baguio sets action plan against emergence of new Covid-19 cases
>> Wednesday, May 6, 2020
CITY HALL BEAT
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY -- Mayor Benjamin Magalong laid down
Wednesday the city’s action plan to address the emergence of new Coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) cases in the past days.
While agreeing that the increase in cases was expected with the start of
the risk-based mass testing among health workers, the mayor expressed concern
that the insufficiency of the test kits and reagents would thwart the mass
testing’s aim to give a picture of the extent of infection in the city.
The mayor said that because of the problem, the city needs again to take
the initiative to purchase its own test kits to close the gap even as he urged
the Department of Health to do its part by providing the needed kits and
consumables if it wants the mass testing to succeed.
He said with the city’s goal of testing 200 persons at risk per day, the
department should provide enough testing materials as well as back-up medical
personnel to undertake the tests.
“Even if we have a system in place, the problem remains if the DOH is
not providing us with enough resources. It’s like letting your soldiers
go to war without providing enough ammunition. And the true war setting
is even better because you can see the enemies. With our situation now,
we are up against an unseen enemy,” the mayor said.
He said that until now the DOH had only provided 100 Real Time
Polymerate Chain Reaction confirmatory swab test kits and had allocated only a
total of 8,100 of such kits for the entire Northern Luzon.
He said that with the area population of 10.5 million against 8,100 test
kits, only .07 percent of the population stand to be covered.
The city has four PCR machines, only one of which
came from DOH.
As of today, only 2,000 RT PCR tests are left while the city’s Rapid
Diagnostic Test which it solicited from private entities are now down to just
700.
“We are running out of test kits and we have barely
scratched the surface. Until now, there is still no clear picture as to
the city’s true COVID picture thus we need to do some initiatives,” the mayor
said.
He also pointed out the need to do resource planning for the coming
months to include additional personnel to allow rest time for the existing
ones.
He also sought the streamlining of testing procedure of the DOH to
eliminate the lag time between the testing and in determining the results.
“We expect that the next two weeks will be challenging as our case
doubling time has also decreased from the original 96 days. We are now
classified as high risk with a gloomy projection that if we fail to arrest the
problem, we will have 39,000 cases by September. So I hope we can
institute the needed measures,” the mayor said.
He asked the city finance committee to work out the emergency purchase
of P10 million worth of test kits.
As to PPEs, the mayor said the city has enough stock for one more month
but has to work out more for its reserves.
The activation of the refurbished Sto. Niño Hospital is also being
worked out as a reserve in case more infections occur.
Documents are now being fast-tracked for approval by the DOH.
City Administrator Bonifacio Dela Peña assured that the building is
ready for occupancy except for logistics like security, utilities,
housekeeping, administrative and medical personnel which can be prepared any
time.
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Mayor Magalong has beefed up further the city’s
contact tracing teams in the light of the surge in Coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) cases in the past days.
The mayor asked Baguio City Police Office Director P Col. Co to orient
more investigators and intelligence personnel on cognitive interviewing to team
up with the City Health Services Team in tracking down contacts of the new
patients.
Co immediately responded and appointed six more Crisis Intervention Team
(CIT)-trained investigators to the pool of contract tracers so that they now
have 20 in the field, 14 from the BCPO and six from the Criminal Investigation
and Detection Group (CIDG).
City Health Officer Dr. Rowena Galpo said the city has several contact
tracing teams currently working double time. She said one patient
has an average of 50 contacts while some have as high as 100.
The mayor said they also exerting more effort to convince patients to
disclose their identities to help in contact tracing.
Currently, 12 out of 30 patients responded to the mayor’s call for
transparency. The mayor said this is crucial as full disclosure helped
alert contacts and cut down tracing time and resources.
To supplement the contact tracers’ efforts, the city also utilizes a
computer-aided system as a complementary tool.
Executive Asst. V Philip Puzon said that through the link analysis
software, a surveillance system was formulated using support, seamless
coordination and automated analysis with the following functions: enrolls and
tracks suspected cases; captures symptoms, demographics, risk factors and
exposures; records lab results; links confirmed cases with contacts; and
monitors patient outcomes.
The tracer program strengthens active case detection through contact
tracing activities, such as identification and follow-up of contacts of a
suspected or confirmed COVID-19 case.
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