Wednesday, April 24, 2024

PBBM Orders Continuation Of Health Workers’ Covid-19 Allowances

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PBBM Orders Continuation Of Health Workers’ Covid-19 Allowances

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President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. on Wednesday ordered the Department of Health (DOH) to ensure that healthcare workers will continue to receive their allowances despite the expiration of the state of calamity declared in 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Marcos made this remark in a meeting with DOH officials at MalacaƱan Palace. The state of calamity expired on Dec. 31, 2022.

ā€œTuloy-tuloy ā€˜yan… Yung inaalala ko dati na hindi matutuloy angĀ compensationĀ para sa atingĀ health workersā€¦ā€˜YungĀ allowanceĀ nila ay pinag-aralan namin nang mabuti kahit hindi itinutuloy angĀ state of calamityĀ ay hindi maapektuhan ang pagbayad doon sa ating mgaĀ health workersĀ ng kanilang mgaĀ benefits (That will continue. I used to be concerned that the compensation for our health workers would not continueā€¦We carefully studied their allowances and even if the state of calamity is not extended, their benefits will not be affected),ā€ he said.

Proclamation No. 929, signed by former President Rodrigo Duterte, declared a state of calamity across the country in March 2020, when Covid-19 began to spread in the country.

The state of calamity was supposed to last for six months but was extended for a year up to Sept. 12, 2021, via Proclamation No. 1021, and was extended for a second time through Proclamation No. 1218.

DOH officer-in-charge Undersecretary Ma. Rosario Vergeire said her agency earlier sought an extension of the state of calamity but said it will respect Marcos’ decision on the matter.

Enough vaccines

Meanwhile, Marcos also assured that the country currently has sufficient supply of Covid-19 vaccine doses.

ā€œPababa naman nang pababa ang atingĀ cases,Ā pababa nang pababa naman ang atingĀ hospitalization,Ā ā€˜yun ang binabantayan natin. SoĀ titingnan natinĀ (Our cases and hospitalization rates are going down so thatā€™s what weā€™re monitoring. We will have to see),ā€ Marcos said.

ā€œHindi na kailangan kagaya ngĀ 2021Ā na lagi tayong nagmamadali makakuha ngĀ vaccineĀ dahil pabawas na ā€˜yungĀ risk, soĀ dapat naman eh mag-adjustĀ din tayo doon sa kung ano ba talaga angĀ scientificĀ naĀ assessmentĀ doon sa sitwasyon ngĀ Covid (The vaccines arenā€™t as necessary as they were in 2021 when we were scrambling to get them because the risk is lower now so we should adjust based on the scientific assessment of the Covid-19 situation),” he added.

He, likewise, welcomed the decline in the number of Covid-19 infections in the country.

Data from the DOH showed that a total of 1,206 new Covid-19 cases were recorded during the week of Jan. 23-29.

The average number of new cases per day during the period stood at 172, reflecting a 36 percent decline from the cases logged on Jan. 16-22.

The DOH has so far vaccinated 73 million individuals, or 94.54 percent of the target population, while 21 million individuals have received their booster shots.

A total of 6.9 million senior citizens, or 79.47 percent of the target A2 population, have received the primary series of Covid-19 vaccines, while 2.76 million senior citizens had their booster shots. (PNA)

Photo credit: Facebook/DOHgovPH

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