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FULL TEXT: Appeal of 11 private hospitals to DOH amid COVID-19 crisis

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City workers wearing protective suits disinfect a street
City workers wearing protective suits disinfect a street, as a preventive measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus, in Manila on March 19, 2020.
AFP / Ted Aljibe

An urgent appeal for a unified approach to the COVID-19 pandemic

Allow us to bring to fore the current state of our healthcare facilities in light  of the COVID-19 pandemic.

An alarming number of nurses, residents, consultants and hospital employees are under 14-day quarantine while the number of PUIs (Persons Under Investigation) continue to flock to our emergency rooms every day. Our regular rooms have been converted into COVID-19 isolation areas, leaving less for other non-COVID-19 high-risk patients who also have life-threatening conditions. The panic is escalating, mortality is increasing, our supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE) are running short, our frontline staff are increasingly getting depleted as more of them are quarantined or physically and emotionally exhausted, and a number of our medical colleagues are already hooked to respirators fighting for their lives in various ICUs [intensive care units]. Even our ICUs are getting full. Soon we will have shortage of respirators. We have every reason to be scared; we are, indeed, very scared because we feel that we are on our own to face our countrymen in dire need of help.

This unprecedented and escalating medical crisis cuts across borders. The rest of the world, even countries as rich as the United States, are facing the same fears, the same looming threat of a shortage of supplies, ICUs, PPEs and healthcare workers. If we do not put our act together, the prospect of the healthcare delivery systems crashing down is imminent and real. It is already happening.

We speak, as one, because the mismatch between the exponential surge of patients and the available healthcare workers is no longer occurring in just one center, but in all our respective institutions. We share information and coping mechanisms, but we cannot share resources that we no longer have.

As we observe globally, and in alignment with the government efforts, the most effective way to slow down this pandemic is through effective containment and distancing within the potentially disease-stricken population. Given the sharp increase of COVID-19+ patients per day, we have to act fast, and act now. There is no time for indecision.

This, our collective call to action is to centralize all efforts and resources into ONE OR TWO COVID-19 hospitals, adequately equipped and invested upon by the government, designated to receive, screen and treat PUIs and COVID-19 positive patients when the allowable number of cases per hospital, private and public, is exceeded. We are aware that there is a plan to do this; we are urgently appealing for the [Department of Health] to mobilize this plan, challenging as it may be, but which the private hospitals are willing and ready to facilitate.

READ: 'We are very scared': With depleting resources, private hospitals appeal for designated COVID-19 facilities

Execution of the plan will allow for concentration of resources, speed of patient processing and efficiency in protocol execution, rendering better chances for infection containment.

With the COVID-19 hospitals in place, the other institutions can then focus on the bigger population who need to be treated for the rest of the other conditions other than the COVID-19 infection. They are the ones we need to equally protect and secure from the virus, so that they and their families can also be assured of appropriate treatment detached from any threat of COVID-19 infection aggravating their condition.

The possibilities and power of a network set-up like this behooves all of us—in both the private and public sectors—to pursue this plan soon. We are not shying away form our resposibilities; we are ready to take in the non-COVID-19 patients of the designated COVID-19 hospitals, and if necessary, provide temporary practice privileges to their medical staff whose (non-COVID-19) patients will be transferred to our hospitals.

This is a plan that we push to be realized without delay. Our objective is to put order and organization on a national scales we all grapple with dwindling resources, increasing morbidity and mortality, and a decimated healthcare workforces the virus continues to spread relentlessly.

Signed:

ADVENTIST MEDICAL CENTER
Dr. Bibly L. Macaya, President & CEO

ASIAN HOSPITAL MEDICAL HOSPITAL
Dr. Jose M. Acuin, Chief Medical Officer

CARDINAL SANTOS MEDICAL CENTER
Dr. Zenaida M. Javier-Uy, SVP, Chief Medical Officer

FATIMA UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
Dr. Oscar Payawal, Chief Medical Officer

MAKATI MEDICAL CENTER
Dr. Saturnino P. Javier, Medical Director & Interim CEO

MANILA DOCTORS HOSPITAL
Dr. Dante Morales, Board Member
Dr. Mario M. Juco, Chief Medical Officer

MEDICAL CENTER MANILA
Dr. Eduardo S. Eseque, Chief Medical Officer

OUR LADY OF LOURDES HOSPITAL
Dr. Milagros Joyce Santos, Chief Medical Officer

THE MEDICAL CITY
Dr. Eugenio Jose F. Ramos, President & CEO

ST. LUKE'S MEDICAL CENTER
Dr. Benjamin SA Camponanes Jr., Chief Medical Officer

UNIVERSITY OF THE EAST RAMON MAGSAYSAY MEDICAL CENTER
Dr. Napoleon B. Alcedo, Assistant Chief Medical Officer

Endorsed by:

PHILIPPINE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS
Dr. Gina C. Nazareth, President

PHILIPPINE COLLEGE OF SURGEONS
Dr. Jose Antonio M. Salud, President

vuukle comment

COVID-19

DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

NOVEL CORONAVIRUS

ST. LUKE'S MEDICAL CENTER

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