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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Suntay pushes hotels as COVID treatment areas

Deputy Majority Leader and Quezon City Rep. Jesus Suntay has filed a resolution seeking to use some hotels as treatment/isolation centers for patients suffering from mild COVID-19 symptoms.

In his House Resolution, Suntay said that “the repurposing of the hotels and other accommodation facilities as alternative health facilities can contribute in mitigating the effects of the pandemic in the industry,” as infection rates continued to overwhelm healthcare facilities in the country.

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“The House of Representatives, in session assembled, urge His Excellency President Rodrigo Roa Duterte, under the powers vested in him under the Constitution, to direct the repurposing of inoperative hotel and other accommodation facilities to host mild COVID patients and/or other Non-COVID patients in order to decongest hospitals in Metro Manila,” Suntay said in his resolution.

According to him, healthcare professionals are claiming that hospitals are now running at critical or near capacity level—some already reached or have gone beyond their capacity limit.

“The Department of Health, through their COVID Bulletin, has revealed that over 79 percent of ICU beds, 72 percent of Isolation Beds, and 60 percent of Ward Beds in the National Capital Region are already occupied,” Suntay noted.

He said with many hotels on lockdown due to the reactivation of the enhanced community quarantine in the NCR Plus area, the repurposing would help mitigate the financial losses brought about by the closing of these temporary residential facilities.

Suntay’s resolution is in line with the appeal of a group of doctors from the Philippine College of Physicians urging Duterte to use some Metro Manila hotels as infirmary facilities to reduce the number of patients with COVID-19 at the hospitals.

According to Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire, intensive care units at 14 of the 21 Metro Manila hospitals are at critical levels regarding the number of COVID-19 cases. Taking into account

that 40 percent of patients admitted in these hospitals are either asymptomatic or have mild cases of COVID, these patients can be transferred to the repurposed hotels where doctors and medical front liners could be assigned to care for them, Suntay proposes.

Suntay’s resolution is based on the “Bayanihan to Heal as One Act,” which states that “under national emergency and when the public interest so requires, the State may temporarily take over or direct

the operation of any privately owned public utility or business affected with public interest, subject to the limits enshrined in the Constitution under Article XII, Section 17.”

As a proposed health measure and to curb the infection rate in the Metro, Suntay hopes that his resolution will be acted upon immediately.

“We cannot deny that the recent surge in COVID-19 cases is not only a major issue for public health, but for the country’s economic recovery as well. Hopefully, we can decide on this resolution quickly, and we will soon be able to alleviate some of COVID-19’s impacts, for our country and people’s sake,” Suntay said.

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