MINERVA BC NEWMAN
CEBU CITY – Some 7,200 doses of Sinovac COVID-19 vaccines arrived in Cebu Tuesday as part of the 2nd batch of vaccines intended for Cebu and Central Visayas.
According to Dr. Mary Jean Loreche, spokesperson of Department of Health (DOH-7), in her briefing Tuesday streamed live via Project Balik Buhay and Office of the Presidential Assistant or the Visayas (OPAV) Facebook pages that Cebu get a total of 21,600 Covid-19 vaccines with the new arrival of the Sinovac and Astrazeneca vaccines in the country.
Loreche said that of this number, 7,200 doses are from Sinovac while 14,400 doses are AstraZeneca and these are used to inoculate 10,800 individuals. The additional vaccines are part of the 1.4 million total doses of Sinovac Biotech that have arrived in the Philippines.
Office of Presidential Assistant for the Visayas (OPAV) Secretary Michael Lloyd Dino is looking forward to the arrival of additional doses of the Sinovac vaccines in the region. He said that the arrival of the second batch of Sinovac vaccines donated by China is another major milestone in the government’s national vaccination program.
Dino gave assurance that there would be no delay in the vaccine rollout despite the vaccine supply woes globally and he added that more deliveries of vaccines from other sources are expected to arrive in the country in the coming weeks and months, under the National Vaccine Roadmap, he pointed out.
Updates on government’s vaccination program
On March 29, President Rodrigo Duterte personally welcomed the arrival of one million doses of Sinovac Biotech vaccines at the Villamor Airbase in Pasay City while Senator Christopher Lawrence “Bong” Go also welcomed the arrival of 400,000 doses of Corona Vaccines earlier.
This is the first batch of COVID-19 vaccines that costs P700 million and paid for by the government. The Philippine government plans to buy a total of 25 million doses of Corona Vaccines.
The said doses are part of the one million-dose donation committed by China. The initial 600,000 doses have already been delivered late last month.
Go on the other hand said that health workers need to be prioritized for the vaccines to protect them against the virus while doing their job of containing the pandemic in the country. The Philippine government is working very hard to inoculate 1.7 million frontliners and that the target should be met to attain herd immunity, Go added.
Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines Huang Xilian meanwhile said that he hopes the second batch of donations will help the Philippines speed up the rollout of the national inoculation campaign in its efforts to address the current resurgence of cases.
“No one is safe until everyone is safe. In the face of the spread of new COVID-19 variants across the globe, and the resurgence of cases in the Philippines, we need to race against time in our efforts to speed up the mass inoculation process,” the Chinese envoy said on his official Facebook page.
Health Secretary Francisco Duque III also noted that the additional vaccine would be a great help with the rise in COVID-19 cases. “We are grateful for the arrival of additional donated vaccines. The arrival of these vaccines could not have occurred at a more opportune time considering the continued rise in cases, which in turn increases the need to inoculate more high-risk individuals as soon as possible.”
The additional donated CoronaVac vaccines will boost the country’s ongoing COVID-19 vaccination program, especially with the increased cases. Initial doses from Sinovac and AstraZeneca are currently being rolled out in the country, DOH said.
The Philippine government is involved in ongoing negotiations with different pharmaceutical companies to ensure that the country secures enough doses to vaccinate 70 million of the population. This number is needed to achieve herd immunity.
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