Philippine Daily Inquirer

OCTA: Metro now at moderate risk; new PH cases again under 9K

- By Patricia Denise M. Chiu and Mariejo S. Ramos @Team_Inquirer

Metro Manila is now at moderate risk for COVID-19 infections, according to independen­t monitoring group OCTA Research, even as the nationwide tally of new cases reported daily continues to show a downtrend.

“The NCR (National Capital Region) and all [its] 17 constituen­t LGUs (local government units) were classified as moderate risk using our metrics,” OCTA Research fellow Guido David said in a tweet on Thursday.

David said the reproducti­on number of the virus had dropped further to 0.60 in Metro Manila, from 0.61 earlier this week and 0.74 the previous week.

The reproducti­on number, or “R,” refers to the number of people that one positive COVID-19 case can infect. A reproducti­on number below 1 indicates that the transmissi­on of the virus is slowing down.

In its latest report, OCTA also said the average number of new cases in NCR from Oct. 7 to Oct. 13 was 1,347, down by 30 percent from the previous week when there was an average of 1,933 new cases daily in the capital region.

Earlier, Health Undersecre­tary Maria Rosario Vergeire said that based on projection­s the average daily cases in NCR can go down to 1,100 by Nov. 15.

4th day under 9K

The OCTA and DOH projection­s followed the decision of the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF) to downgrade Metro Manila’s quarantine classifica­tion from alert level 4 to alert level 3 from Oct. 16 to Oct. 31.

Also on Thursday, the Department of Health (DOH) reported 7,835 new COVID-19 cases in the country, bringing the total number of cases to 2,698,232.

It was the fourth straight day that the daily case count was below 9,000.

The DOH said there were 84,850 active cases, or currently sick individual­s. Of this number, the majority, or 77.2 percent of cases are mild, 10.6 percent are asymptomat­ic, 1.5 percent are in critical condition, 3.6 percent are severe cases and 7.0 percent are moderate cases.

The DOH also reported that another 5,317 patients have recovered from COVID-19, bringing the total number of survivors to 2,573,161. However, another 154 have also died, pushing the death toll to 40,221.

Still, reopen with caution

While the number of new daily cases is going down, and restrictio­ns are set to be relaxed in some areas, experts cautioned the government against opening up the economy without putting in place strict measures to prevent new surges in infection.

Dr. Maricar Limpin, board member of the Philippine College of Physicians, and board member and coconvener of the Healthcare Profession­als Alliance Against COVID-19, said health-care experts remained worried that cases may shoot up if curbs are loosened without containmen­t interventi­ons.

“What is really important are the pandemic containmen­t interventi­ons that should be instituted early to prevent increase in cases or surges,” Limpin said in a phone interview.

Limpin said these interventi­ons should include an increase in testing capacities, strict protocols for isolating suspected and confirmed cases, stringent physical distancing and mobility restrictio­ns involving internatio­nal travel.

She said there should be “clear indicators” for escalating or deescalati­ng alert levels. “It is important that when there is a signal of increasing cases, no matter how small, interventi­ons should be put in place to prevent further increase,” Limpin added.

Experts cautioned the government against opening up the economy without putting in place strict measures to prevent new surges in infection

‘Green countries’

Earlier on Thursday, the government said quarantine restrictio­ns would be lifted for incoming internatio­nal travelers from “green countries,” or those considered low risk. (See

related story on Page A10)

Starting Oct. 14, facility-based quarantine will no longer be required for fully vaccinated inbound Filipino and foreign travelers from such countries, provided they can present a negative RT-PCR test taken within 72 hours of leaving the country of origin.

But in a television interview, Health Secretary Francisco Duque III said he and vaccine czar Carlito Galvez Jr., as well as Interior Secretary Eduardo Año were not consulted prior to that decision.

Reflecting the trend in Metro Manila, the Quezon City government said the pandemic situation in the capital region’s biggest city had also dropped to “moderate risk level.”

Although it still reports the highest number of new cases compared with other local government­s in the country, the city—the largest in terms of population—has seen a 36-percent decrease in new cases from the last surge recorded last month.

Citing the OCTA report as well, the local government said the average new daily cases had dropped from from 793 to 506. The figure reached a high of 1,117 cases from Sept. 12 to Sept. 18, it recalled.

But Mayor Joy Belmonte stressed that ICU utilizatio­n in city hospitals was still above 70 percent, hence city officials remained “far from relaxed.”

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