Bontoc: 410 Covid cases, 2 deaths; Mt Prov ‘critical’
>> Friday, February 5, 2021
BONTOC, Mountain Province – This capital town
had a total of 410 Covid-19 with 306 active cases and two deaths as of Jan. 25
even as Mountain Province was categorized the only “critical” province in the
country.
Bontoc Mayor Franklin
Odsey, in a social media post, said the UK variant of the coronavirus was
detected here with 12 of 35 specimens testing positive for the more communicable
variant.
Odsey, who is now on self-quarantine after contracting the disease last Jan. 15, said, lockdowns in every barangay with Covid-19 positives were still in effect.
Odsey, who is now on self-quarantine after contracting the disease last Jan. 15, said, lockdowns in every barangay with Covid-19 positives were still in effect.
Vice mayor Eusebio
Kabluyen also tested positive for Covid-19 on Jan. 24.
He urged people who
came in contact with him the past 14 days to get in touch with the municipal
health office.
The Dept. of Health is
looking into the swab test results of eight residents who recently returned
here to determine whether they were the sources of the new Covid-19 variant
spreading in the town.
Health officials have
been figuring out the source of the B117 variant that reached Bontoc and
infected 12 residents, said DoH spokesperson Maria Rosario Vergeire.
“Our contact tracing
teams saw eight Filipinos who returned to the country and entered Bontoc. We
will get their details like their RT-PCR results, so, we can identify if the
infection came from them,” Vergeire said in a televised forum.
Bontoc has the highest
number of the B117 variant infections in the country, accounting for 12 of the
17 cases. Three children in the mountainous town aged 5, 6, and 10 were among
those infected.
Contact tracing teams
Cordillera tracked down 615 contacts of the Covid-19 patients, including second
and third generation contacts, authorities said.
The DoH earlier said
38 close contacts of Covid-19 patients infected with the new variant have
tested positive for Covid-19.
A returning Filipino
from the United Kingdom who arrived in the town with his wife on 14 December
through a private vehicle after testing negative for Covid-19 was suspected to
be the source of the mutated virus in the province.
But Dr. Alethea de
Guzman, a medical specialist of the health department’s epidemiology bureau,
later said there is still no strong evidence to prove such since the patient
was not found with the more infectious variant.
De Guzman, however,
said all the 11 other cases are linked to the patient.
The DoH stated earlier
this week that the clustering of cases in Barangay Samoki in Bontoc is now
considered a local transmission of the more infectious variant in the area, but
added it is not a community transmission yet.
The country confirmed
its first known case of the B117 variant on 13 January in a 29-year-old real
estate agent who returned to the country from Dubai on 7 January.
Residents submitted
themselves recently for RT-PCR testing conducted by the
National Task Force Against Covid-19 through the Bases Conversion and Development
Authority and Bureau of Fire Protection.
The mass testing
started in Barangays Samoki and Tocucan, followed by
Barangay Bontoc Ili and barangays Poblacion and Caluttit on
Jan. 28. Two mass swabbing stations were set up in Samoki, which is
the most affected by COVID among the barangays.
The ACT targeted 5,000
tests in the municipality prioritizing these barangays which have the most
number of cases. It is also scheduled in the towns of Sabangan, Sagada and
Bauko which have also recorded surge of Covid cases.
The DOH on Jan. 22
announced that 12 of the 16 new cases of the more transmissible Covid 19 UK
variant in the Philippines were from Bontoc.
Seven were males, and
five females with 11 of them were from barangay Samoki.
Nine of the cases recovered
while three remained in isolation at a hospital.
The DOH confirmed
“local transmission in Bontoc of the B117 variant of SARS-CoV-2 as identified
through genomic sequencing.”
Expanded contact
tracing is continuing to track down all persons who had interaction with or
exposed to the 12 locals found out with Covid-19 UK variant.
The DOH sent
reinforcement team led by DOH- CAR assistant regional director
Amelita Pangilinan composed of contact tracers from CAR, Regions 1, 2 and 3 to
help the Bontoc LGU in tracing up to the third
generation contacts, to suppress further transmission.
The Cordillera
regional health office sent contact tracers to Bontoc on Jan. 24.
Pangilinan said four
DOH teams from Cordillera and Regions 1, 2 and 3 arrived in this town Jan. 24
and set up an incident command system (ICS) post.
The DOH teams
conducted contact tracing and swabbing of test specimen from around 160
individuals, she said.
With some
of the Covid positive cases were third generation contacts of
the UK variant cases, contact tracing continues and will be expanded up to
three generations of contact of the new confirmed cases, she said.
Pangilinan said
contact tracing and swabbing samples that will turn out positive will be
subjected for testing at the Philippine Genome Center to check if these are of
the UK variant of Covid – 19.—With PIA reports
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