Philippines
sees 10,000 new COVID-19 cases as tight curbs return to
capital
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[March 29, 2021]
By Neil Jerome Morales
MANILA (Reuters) - The Philippine passed
the 10,000 mark for new daily coronavirus infections for the first time
on Monday and put its capital region back on one of its toughest levels
of lockdown, to try to tackle a spike in cases that is testing its
healthcare capacity.
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Manila and surrounding provinces were put back under enhanced
community quarantine (ECQ), the highest tier in its containment
protocols, for the first time since May 2020 to try to quell the
surge in cases, despite inroads late last year towards controlling
its epidemic.
The country recorded 10,016 new infections on Monday, bringing the
overall tally to 731,894, with deaths at 13,186, one of the highest
caseloads in Asia.
Health authorities blame the spike on poor public compliance with
prevention measures and the presence of new and more transmissible
coronavirus variants in the capital region, which accounts for about
a third of economic activity.
"This surge is really challenging while ECQ is painful particularly
for the economic sector," said Benjamin Co, an infectious disease
expert with three Manila hospitals.
The Philippines was the first country in Asia to go under a
nationwide lockdown and broad restrictions and movement curbs saw
its economy slump 9.5% last year, its worst economic contraction on
record.
Hospitals' intensive care and isolation bed capacity in the capital
region have reached critical levels or above 70% usage, government
data showed.
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"I can give you beds, I can
give you rooms. The problem is I cannot give you
additional manpower capacity, like nurses and
doctors to take care of you," Co added.
(For graphic on Philippines' new COVID-19 infections spike as
capital region enters tighter restrictions -
https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/PHILIPPINES/
bdwpkmebwpm/chart.png)
Health experts say the surge in infections underscores the need to
expedite a national vaccination drive, with only 656,331 healthcare
workers so far given their first of two shots. The government aims
to inoculate 70 million people this year.
It has also struggled to secure vaccine supplies, with an inventory
of 2.525 million doses, mostly of Sinovac Biotech's vaccine, one
million of which arrived on Monday.
(Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales; Editing by Ed Davies)
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