Ilocos Norte health workers help to build field hospital | Inquirer

Ilocos Norte health workers help to build field hospital

/ 11:11 AM July 15, 2021

Health workers in Ilocos Norte volunteer to build a makeshift facility in Mariano Marcos Memorial Hospital and Medical Center

Health workers in Ilocos Norte volunteer to build a makeshift facility in Mariano Marcos Memorial Hospital and Medical Center to increase its bed capacity as the hospital starts to be overwhelmed by COVID-19 patients. (Photo courtesy of Mariano Marcos Memorial Hospital and Medical Center)

LAOAG CITY—Health workers in state-run Mariano Marcos Memorial Hospital and Medical Center (MMMH&MC) have stepped up their COVID-19 response by building a field hospital as it starts to be overwhelmed by the rising number of COVID-19 patients, officials said.

Dr. Mari Anne Quijano-Orros, MMMH&MC medical consultant, said Wednesday that the basketball court and hospital driveways were being converted into field wards.

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“[This is] in view of the increasing number of [COVID-19] suspects and confirmed cases occupying the regular isolation wards,” Orros said in a Facebook post.

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MMMH&MC, the primary COVID-19 treatment center in Ilocos Norte, has 65 percent of the 114 COVID-19 beds occupied, according to the Department of Health (DOH).

In the past days, Ilocos Norte had been experiencing a surge in COVID-19 cases, with 1,119 patients. As of July 14, at least 121 new ones were added to the province’s tally.

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Eleven of the 23 towns and cities in Ilocos Norte have at least 21 active COVID-19 cases, the provincial government data show.

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The capital city of Laoag has the highest number of active cases at 429.

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The DOH said Ilocos Norte’s average daily attack rate per 100,000 population increased to 14.22 percent, which is considered high.

Jhey-ar Mangati, MMMH&MC’s health education and promotions officer, said during a press briefing on Wednesday that the construction materials that had been mostly donated by the public, were used to build the cubicles of the field hospitals.

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The hospital has accounted for at least P100,000 in cash donations from the public after it appealed for help on July 7 in light of the increasing number of COVID-19 patients being admitted to the hospital, Mangati said.

Orros said the hospital workers have been “doing whatever they can, helping however they can, [and] as fast as they can, to accommodate the surge.”

The hospital is also “in dire need” of institutional workers who could help in its COVID-19 response, according to Orros.

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As of July 14, Ilocos Norte had logged at least 4,868 total COVID-19 cases, of which 3,662 had recovered, while 87 had died.

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For more news about the novel coronavirus click
What you need to know about Coronavirus.
For more information on COVID-19, call the DOH Hotline: (02) 86517800 local 1149/1150.

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TAGS: COVID-19, Regions

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