Bishop calls for volunteers to help with Covid-19 care

Bishop calls for volunteers to help with Covid-19 care
Bishop David. Photo: UCAN/supplied

MANILA (UCAN): Bishop Pablo Virgilio David, acting president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), called on young people to assist doctors and nurses who had earlier called for a “time-out” due to an overwhelming number of Covid-19 coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) patients in the country’s hospitals.

According to the Philippine Health Department, the country had recorded 169,213 Covid-19 cases with 2,687 deaths as of August 18.

“On the feast day of San Roque [Saint Roch], I wish to call on young people in all dioceses, especially in parishes named after San Roque, to help us revive the Cofradias de San Roque [Confraternity of Saint Roch] by volunteering to serve as health care volunteers to back up our health care workers, especially in quarantine facilities,” Bishop David said on social media on August 16.

The Confraternity of St. Roch was instituted by Pope Paul III in the 1500s to do charitable works for the sick, particularly those struck by pandemics. St. Roch’s intercession is also being invoked by churchgoers against the coronavirus pandemic.

Bishop David said care should be given to patients not only in hospitals but also to those confined in their homes.

“I am referring to the care of Covid positive patients, not necessarily in hospitals but in public or private quarantine facilities, including those who have opted for home quarantine. We can enter into a partnership with … health officials and assist them in monitoring two kinds of quarantined patients: those without symptoms and those with mild symptoms,” the bishop added.

The bishop said his diocese had started an online monitoring programme for Covid-19 patients to lessen the risk of exposure for their volunteers.

“For the moment, we (in the Diocese of Kalookan) are mobilising volunteers who can do mainly online monitoring of Covid positives because we understand the risk of exposing them to infection if we deploy them to do physical monitoring,” Bishop David said.

He also said members of the confraternity would undergo training and accreditation by medical professionals before doing their work.

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“We can have our volunteers trained by city and municipal health care officers and also have them formally accredited as volunteers, with a proper definition of what they will be allowed to do and what they are not allowed to do,” the bishop said.

“Each volunteer, depending on their capacity and availability, will be assigned a number of patients to monitor and are expected to report the progress of their patients to the accredited health officers in charge of them, on a daily basis. The idea is to keep as few patients as possible from having to be taken to hospital so that hospitals don’t get overwhelmed,” he said.

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