Laoag converts evacuation center to isolation site

By Leilanie Adriano

April 14, 2021, 7:42 pm

<p><strong>ISOLATION CUBICLES</strong>. A total of 18 cubicles are ready to accommodate mild and asymptomatic patients for Covid-19 in Laoag City. The city government led by Mayor Michael M. Keon on Wednesday (April 14, 2021) opened its evacuation center in Cabungaan village as a temporary isolation facility due to the rise in infections. (<em>Photo courtesy of Alwyn Formantes</em>)  </p>

ISOLATION CUBICLES. A total of 18 cubicles are ready to accommodate mild and asymptomatic patients for Covid-19 in Laoag City. The city government led by Mayor Michael M. Keon on Wednesday (April 14, 2021) opened its evacuation center in Cabungaan village as a temporary isolation facility due to the rise in infections. (Photo courtesy of Alwyn Formantes)  

LAOAG CITY – Rising infections prompted local officials here to convert another evacuation center in Barangay Cabungaan as additional isolation rooms for mild and asymptomatic cases of the coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19).

Laoag Mayor Michael Keon said in a press conference on Wednesday that the Covid-19 situation here is getting out of hand and the city government is doing its best to isolate the infected residents,

“Everything has to be fixed and we will use the evacuation center as a temporary isolation facility for Covid-19 patients,” he said, after the opening of the temporary isolation facility which can accommodate at least 18 persons. Keon added that the three existing isolation facilities here that are located at the City Library, the ABC Hall, and an evacuation center are almost full with the surge of infections.

As of Wednesday, the City Health Office reported 19 new cases as a result of massive contact tracing and swabbing of persons who have been in close contact with the previously infected patients.

As such, a total of 59 Covid-19 active cases here have been recorded since the pandemic started.

The city government has hired three additional nurses to be assigned at the new isolation facility in Cabungaan.

Due to the current Covid-19 situation, Keon said the city government is planning to avail of a loan for the purchase of Covid-19 vaccines.

“We have no money for the purchase of (more) vaccines. As much as possible, I don’t want the city to have a loan under my administration but I have no choice. We must vaccinate (more people) as much as we can,” he said, citing the city government has been dependent on the vaccination rollout of the Department of Health since it started vaccinating health workers here last month.

Last week, the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) turned over a total of 60 additional isolation rooms to the provincial government to accommodate mild or asymptomatic patients.

The DPWH augmented the province's isolation capacity amid the ongoing Covid-19 outbreaks in various parts of the province. (PNA

 

 

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