Filipinos will need to adapt to a "new normal" at the end of a lockdown to defeat the coronavirus pandemic, government officials said Tuesday, as they prepared measures for a post-quarantine scenario.
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"It's far from over because while there is no vaccine yet, this is what we call the new normal," Cabinet Secretary Karlo Nograles, spokesman of the government task force fighting the disease, said Wednesday.
Officials have yet to say whether the lockdown will be lifted as scheduled on April 13, as it relies on the assessment to a technical working group led by the Department of Health.
Meanwhile, Socioeconomic Planning Secretary Ernesto Pernia said his department is leading efforts "to revive consumer and business confidence even sooner."
Millions of poor families for the meantime are dependent on relief aid while waiting for a cash subsidy from the national goverment.
Luzon, home to roughly half of the Philippines' 100-million population, was placed under a month-long quarantine on March 17, as people were told to stay at home to control the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus.
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Provinces in Visayas and Mindanao have also restricted movement to contain the outbreak.
Among options being considered by the government is a barangay-based quarantine to pave the way for a gradual lifting of the lockdown.
Under that scenario, the reopening of essential businesses such as those involved in the supply chain of food products, medical products, and other necessities will be prioritized, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said.
"It should be gradual. It's important for businesses to resume operations so that people can go to work, again following the new norm, social distancing," he said.
Once businesses are allowed to resume, Lopez said companies must adopt a "new culture," which includes physical distancing and avoiding mass gatherings.
Marketing, construction and public transportation should also resume with safeguards to prevent the spread of COVID-19, said Presidential Adviser on Entrepreneurship Joey Concepcion.
"The goal really is while we have to be guarded against the virus, we have to start reviving the economy. We might kill the virus but we might die because the economy is floundering. That's the biggest challenge we're facing right now," Concepcion said.
More Filipinos are expected to be tested for COVID-19 in the coming days after the health department announced that it could now run 1,000 tests a day from the previous daily average of 300.
With more cases of the disease expected to be confirmed in the coming days, Nograles said the government is preparing a segregation system to isolate patients who will test positive for COVID-19 and patients under investigation (PUIs).
The government is turning its convention centers into "fully-functional" quarantine facilities, he said. It is also looking at ships and hotels as alternative quarantine sites, as more hospitals become overwhelmed with the rising number of COVID-19 cases.
Nograles explained that the government is planning to allot hospitals for COVID-19 patients who are in a severe or critical state to ensure adequate medical treatment.
Those who will test positive for the disease but will exhibit mild symptoms will be isolated "as a group" to avoid overcrowding in hospitals, he said.
"We have to make sure that the hospital bed capacity is intact…We have to prioritize severe and critical patients," Nograles added.
Patients under investigation or those who have symptoms of the disease but are still waiting for their test results have to be isolated in a facility fit for "single-room occupancy," he said.
As for persons under monitoring, or those who were exposed to COVID-19 patients but are still asymptomatic, the Cabinet official said the government is also looking for a way to isolate them from the public.
"We want to manage the spread of the disease. We want to ensure that everyone who gets infected with COVID-19 will be taken care of. We want more recoveries than deaths," Nograles said.
But even if the government sets up massive quarantine facilities and lifts the lockdown, Filipinos still need to be wary of the possibility of getting infected with COVID-19, since there is no available vaccine or cure for the disease yet.
"Even as we transition to the new normal, we have to still implement social distancing measures. We need to be careful because as long as the COVID-19 threat is there and there is no vaccine, we always need to be careful," Nograles said.
For now, government policy is erring on the side of caution as it depends on science to guide its next move.
"It will be based on science. It will be based on numbers. It will be based on facts and figures and it would totally depend on the cooperation of everybody," Nograles said. With Vito Barcelo