
MANILA (UCAN): Several hospitals in the Philippines declared they can no longer accept Covid-19 coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) patients because they have exceeded their capacity to take care of them.
On March 28, the Cardinal Santos Medical Centre issued a public advisory telling Covid patients to look for other hospitals because it had reached full capacity.
“We advise patients who are suspected to be infected with Covid-19 or those who have been confirmed to be infected with the disease to proceed to other medical institutions for urgent medical attention,” said the hospital.
“… we continue to accept non-Covid-19 patients in our facilities …(the hospital) is implementing stringent protocols to ensure the safety of all patients, especially during this time,” the advisory said.
On March 29, the Philippines logged its highest single-day tally of Covid-19 cases with 10,016 infections. The country has had 13,297 deaths (Worldometer, March 31).
Manila’s biggest hospitals had earlier closed their doors to Covid patients to accommodate patients with serious illnesses.
“We are a cardiac centre. We have a lot of heart cases. These are all high-risk patients. We hope that they (Covid patients) will have mercy and not go here,” said physician Joel Abadilla, executive director of the Philippine Heart Centre.
‘We advise patients who are suspected to be infected with Covid-19 or those who have been confirmed to be infected with the disease to proceed to other medical institutions for urgent medical attention’
Other private hospitals like Saint Luke’s Medical Centre, De Los Santos Medical Centre, Saint Luke’s Medical-Bonifacio Global City and Makati Medical Centre issued similar statements.
Another medical facility said its staff were overwhelmed by the number of patients.
“Our frontline healthcare workforce is already overstretched as 137 of them are in quarantine. Unless we are able to move the new patients to other hospitals, our healthcare delivery system is going to break down,” said Eugenio Jose Ramos, chief executive of The Medical City.
He stressed that doctors and nurses need to rest to cope with the demands of the pandemic, otherwise the Philippines’ health system would collapse.
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“We cannot take the risk of letting them (medical practitioners) continue to work in case they infect others. They also need to rejuvenate so they can function … They need to take care of themselves so they can take care of others,” Ramos added.
Manila apostolic administrator, Bishop Broderick Pabillo, encouraged churchgoers to register for the government’s vaccination programme to minimise the spread of the virus.
“I hope the people will not be afraid of vaccination because this will help us prevent being infected with the new coronavirus,” Bishop Pabillo said in an interview.
He said he is willing to open Manila churches and Catholic schools as vaccination sites.
“Our doors are open to be vaccination centres for the people. If the government lacks the facilities, we can help in order to make the vaccination program more efficient. In this way, we can lessen the continuous rise of infections in the Philippines,” Bishop Pabillo added.