Senator Imee Marcos said the country should prepare for a worst-case scenario wherein herd immunity could no longer be attained.
“Herd immunity remains theoretical and has become a moving
target. Last year it was 70% of the population, today it’s 90%, but tomorrow it
may well be out of range,” Marcos said.
“With booster shots already in high demand, even as first doses
have yet to reach populations in less developed countries, will vaccine
manufacturers be able to provide?” Marcos asked.
Besides precarious global vaccine supply, Marcos added that
breakthrough infections among the vaccinated, the emergence of more variants,
the uncertain length of vaccine efficacy, and the possible reduction of
healthcare capacities due to hospital shutdowns and worker protests are also
among the factors that make attaining herd immunity seem unlikely.
“I’d rather be the bearer of bad news than of false hope. The
fact is, pandemic control worldwide has become a Sisyphean struggle,” Marcos
added, alluding to the Greek myth of the king whose eternal punishment for
holding Death hostage was to keep pushing a boulder uphill without ever
reaching the top.
Adding to the anxiety, Marcos said, is the lifting of immigration
bans on 10 countries, which takes effect Sept. 6, 2021 after being recommended
to the President by the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging
Infectious Diseases (IATF).
Travelers from Bangladesh, Nepal, Oman, Thailand, India,
Indonesia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)
will now be allowed entry to the Philippines, subject to testing and quarantine
protocols.
Despite the precautions in place, Marcos contends that the
Philippines’ low vaccination rate of 13% of its population makes the IATF’s
recommendation “reckless, if premature.”
Marcos cited that the United States, which has vaccinated about
54% of its population, still restricts entry to non-immigrant travelers from
India and lists Bangladesh, Malaysia,
Nepal, Thailand, and the UAE as ‘Very High Risk’ countries, while Indonesia,
Oman, and Sri Lanka are considered ‘High Risk’.
The United Kingdom, which has fully vaccinated about 65% of its
population, puts Bangladesh, Indonesia, Nepal, Oman, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and
Thailand on its ‘Red List’.
“While we pray for a miracle and a cure, we must support
healthcare capacities by paying government debts to hospitals and healthcare
workers ASAP, conclude our own clinical trials for repurposed drugs like
Ivermectin, include booster shots in the 2022 national budget and increase
funding for the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine while a virology
institute is yet to be built to develop Philippine-made vaccines,” Marcos stressed.
“On a personal level, let’s observe an immunity-boosting
lifestyle regimen of getting adequate sleep, keeping hydrated, exercising
regularly, quitting cigarettes and alcohol, taking Vitamin C and zinc, and
making natural health food like malunggay and virgin coconut oil part of our
diet,” Marcos added.
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