CITY HALL BEAT
Aileen P. Refuerzo
BAGUIO CITY -- Mayor
Benjamin B. Magalong ordered redeployment of checkpoints in the city’s
129-barangays.
This, to limit
residents’ movements to essential and permitted activities before curfew hours.
In Memorandum
No. 125 series of 2020 the mayor explained, recent spike in cases called for
stricter measures to contain transmission of the Coronavirus Disease 2019
(COVID-19).
He said the
city is still under Modified General Community Quarantine (MGCQ), which
prohibits non-essential travels.
As of press
time, some barangays have started to comply with the mayor’s directives,
setting-up checkpoints in coordination with the Baguio City Police Office
(BCPO).
To serve as
deterrent, the mayor said checkpoints must be located along barangay or
interior roads and not on national or provincial roads. It must be operated
under the supervision of the BCPO.
Checkpoints
must ensure movement of residents are for essential purposes only; and, not
outside current curfew hours. However, cargo vehicles passage must be
unimpeded, the mayor reminded.
“We have been
having a sharp increase in cases in our locale so, if you don’t have anything
important to do, stay home. Let’s not put our guards down,” he reiterated.
***
Mayor
Magalong on July 20 also issued Memorandum No. 123-2020, ordering barangay
chiefs and members of the Barangay Health Emergency Teams (BHERTs) to encourage
residents experiencing flu-like symptoms to have medical check-ups.
City Health
Services Office head Dr. Rowena Galpo was likewise tipped to prepare different
health centers for the influx of residents seeking medical attention and
testing.
The mayor
said, “If we assess people with flu-like symptoms like fever, cough, runny or
stuffy nose, body aches, headache, and fatigue early, we can immediately
identify carriers and isolate them thereby preventing further virus
transmission.”
These comes
in the heels of a sharp increase in COVID-19 cases in the city in the past
days, with clustering observed in two barangays. Patients of late manifested
symptoms of the malady.
Allaying
fears, the mayor averred, “Although we have had an increase of COVID-19
confirmed cases in the city in recent weeks, we are completely prepared and
capacitated with adequate testing and isolation facilities for our
constituents.”
He added, the
city is ready to address future cases with its well-placed contact tracing,
testing, isolation and medical systems.
But the
residents’ cooperation remains to be a crucial factor, he emphasized.
The mayor
appealed, “Please bear with us and continue to be vigilant in observing our
health and quarantine protocols by wearing your masks properly at all times.”
“Wash your
hands; observe cough and sneeze etiquettes; limit your travels outside of the
home to essentials; maintain physical distancing; and, avoid the 3 Cs: crowded
places; close contact settings; and confined and enclosed spaces,” he added.
"Treat
yourselves like you have it. Treat others like they have it. Make it a habit.
***
Baguio now
has a total of 387 Barangay Health Emergency Response Teams (BHERTs) to carry
out Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) control measures in the grassroots.
Mayor
Magalong said the number is now more than the requirement under the minimum
health system capacity standards for COVID-19 preparedness and response
strategies set by the Dept. of Health under its Administrative Order No.
2020-0016 for local government units, which is one BHERT for every 1,000
residents.
He thanked
the Dept. of Interior and Local Government (DILG) Baguio Field Office under
City Director Evelyn Trinidad for spearheading the creation of the teams.
Trinidad, in
her report to the mayor, said that to comply with the DPH requirement, the city
needed a total of 370 BHERTs but a total of 387 teams were actually organized
or 17 more than the expected number.
The report
showed that 15 barangays formed additional teams to address the needs of their
population.
Irisan
barangay had the most number with 34 teams followed by Asin Road with 14, Camp
7 with 13 and Loakan Proper with 11.
The mayor
last July 1 ordered the formation of more BHERTs to comply with the DOH
requirement and for the city to “effectively maintain and carry out standard
preparedness mechanisms against COVID-19.
Before the
order, the city only has one BHERT in each of the 129 barangays.
The BHERT is
tasked to keep a list of persons in the barangay who had been to
COVID-19-afflicted areas and submit the list to the City Inter-Agency Task
Force chaired by Mayor Magalong.
The BHERTs
also enforces home confinement for persons arriving from the other areas, in
coordination with the Department of Health; extend assistance and support to
persons undergoing home confinement; refer and transport COVID patients; BHERTs
members shall conduct regular barangay-wide cleanup campaign as well as provide
information campaign to educate their constituents on proper hygiene and
sanitation practices, in accordance to the guideline provided by the DOH.
The team is
composed of a chairperson, a barangay tanod, a Barangay health Worker, a Barangay
Nutrition Action Officer and a Barangay Nutrition Scholar where at least one
member must be a registered nurse or midwife.
The mayor
said the BHERTs may be augmented by physicians, nurses, midwives, sanitary
inspectors, population officers, Bureau of Fire Protection staff, City Disaster
Risk Reduction and Management Office staff or volunteers.
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