With just over 10% of the country's 110 million people fully
vaccinated, millions remain vulnerable to infection amid efforts to
fully immunise up to 70 million before the year ends.
Movement in metro Manila, an urban sprawl of 16 cities home to 13
million people, has been restricted to try to contain the Delta
variant, which was first detected in India.
Salvador Camacho, 71, got over his initial worry about side effects
and decided to get his jab when a slot opened for a night
appointment at one of the 24-hour hubs.
"I do not really want to be inoculated because I have a lot of
sickness, but lately I see a lot of people older than me getting
vaccinations, and my child and wife told me to take my jab since we
never know when I might get infected," he said.
Joan Carbonell, who works as a supervisor in a Manila vaccination
hub, said the decision by some hubs to open at night was also to
limit crowds in the morning as people scramble to get a shot.
Last week, thousands queued outside Manila vaccination centres after
rumours spread that people would not be able to leave their homes if
they did not get their shots.
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The Philippines has reported
more than 1.67 million infections and 29,000
deaths so far during the pandemic, but the
number of positive tests has been rising,
driving a surge in cases and hospitalisations.
The positivity rate rose for a sixth straight
day on Tuesday to 21.9%, up from around 15% at
the start of August, data from the health
ministry showed. The World Health Organization
(WHO) says the positivity rate should stay below
5% for a two-week period for a outbreak to be
considered under control.
Meanwhile, more hospitals have reported that
their intensive care units, isolation beds and
wards are nearing full capacity, and some have
had to refuse new patients because of a lack of
beds and ventilators.
Philippine hospitals with occupancy at critical
levels rose to 289 on Tuesday from 236 on
Sunday, reaching more than a fifth of the
country's 1,290 hospitals, government data
showed.
(Reporting by Eloisa Lopez and Jay Ereno;
Additional reporting by Peter Blaza, Adrian
Portugal and Neil Jerome Morales; Writing by Ed
Davies; Editing by Tom Hogue)
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