Just when we thought it had faded into the background of public health concerns, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is once again making headlines in the Philippines. After years of declining or manageable numbers, why is HIV now being treated as a potential public health emergency? It wasn’t too long ago that the Department of Health (DOH) assured us that HIV cases in the country had dropped to levels they could handle. In fact, it seemed the disease had taken a back seat to more pressing issues like COVID-19 and mental health. But recent data paints a very different picture—one that is alarming enough for Health Secretary Ted Herbosa to recommend that President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. declare a national public health emergency. The numbers are staggering. DOH Assistant Secretary Albert Francis E. Domingo reports that the country is now seeing an average of 57 new HIV cases every single day. The total number of HIV-positive individuals has reached nearly 100,000. And projections...
Online edition of The Ilocos Times, a community newspaper based in Laoag City, Ilocos Norte.