MENTAL HOSPITAL – Anyare? April 9 pa last data – 39 covid 19 POSITIVE (28 MDs and BSNs, 2 employees, 6 patients while 3 patients died)

MATUMAL ang labas ng balita. Sa ganyang sakunang pangkalusugan, dapat arawaraw may update para malaman ng pambansang pamunuan at LGU kung anong tulong ang kailangang ibigay. Sabi naman ng NCMH na malimit naman daw sila magbigay ng report sa Department of Health at DoH ang tagapagbalita sa publiko.

*********************

Gag order for National Center for Mental Health woes

Philippine Daily Inquirer
April 14, 2020

On Black Saturday, GMA-7 newscaster Arnold Clavio exploded a bombshell when he posted information he said he got about a hospital where dead bodies were piling up in the hallways due to a lack of body bags, and the hospital staff had been allegedly ordered to stop the tally of COVID-19 deaths. Following swift public furor, Health Secretary Francisco Duque III immediately denied there was any instruction for hospitals to stop counting fatalities from the outbreak, and the East Avenue Medical Center eventually admitted it was the facility in question. However, the bodies were not in the hospital hallway, it said, but in the morgue hallway. Per a CNN Philippines interview with the hospital spokesperson, as of 4 p.m. Saturday, “6 bodies remain uncollected in the morgue.”

It’s likely that, because of the public uproar that prodded health authorities to spring to action in a matter of hours, the hospital’s appeal for more protective equipment for its personnel, as well as body bags and a mobile freezer to augment its morgue facility, would be addressed soon.

The situation at the country’s largest facility for mental health patients came to light when its chief administrative officer Clarita Avila disclosed that, as of April 5, 34 of the NCMH staff were positive for COVID-19, 28 of them doctors and nurses. In addition, 297 of its employees became PUIs or patients under investigation while 181 were PUMs or patients under monitoring. Of the center’s 83 psychiatrists, 50 were under self-quarantine. Three patients had also died of the disease.

Already, 30 percent of NCMH’s more than 1,000 nursing staff no longer report for work as they are either PUIs or PUMs, or are simply afraid to go to work for lack of personal protective equipment, said Avila. Appealing for help, she noted that the facility only had 100 pieces left from 586 PPEs, all of them from private donors. That appalling situation should have roused Duque et al. to address the matter pronto. Instead, the response to Avila’s appeal was a gag order.

In a letter posted on the hospital’s Facebook page, NCMH head Dr. Roland Cortez told Avila to stand down: “This is to inform you that you are not the spokesperson of NCMH, you are not a member of the NCMH COVID-19 committee and not even a member of the expanded management committee of the hospital.” Avila was ordered to “refrain from issuing statements about COVID-19 because this function is under DOH Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire.’’

But if reports are submitted to higher-ups every day, the situation under Cortez’s watch has apparently gone unresolved—or been kept under wraps—such that, on top of Avila having to turn whistleblower with her disclosures, an “open letter’’ from a health care worker in the NCMH backed up her claims with more damning details. The letter lamented, among others, the failure by hospital management to provide protective equipment and food to its frontliners, and that Cortez allegedly refused to implement skeletal workforce arrangements until the situation turned for the worse.

The situation at the NCMH is dead-serious, and demands utmost transparency and decisive action from health authorities to contain the spread of COVID-19 among a particularly vulnerable set of people. But how does gagging Avila protect the interest of the NCMH patients, or its workers? That desperate frontliners have to resort to airing their sentiments anonymously can only speak of the dysfunctional state of affairs at the facility. A doctor even had to appeal to Vice President Leni Robredo to include the NMCH in the routes serviced by vehicles for health care workers.

Even before the pandemic, there have been reports about the dilapidated facilities and insufficient budget for the 90-year-old NCMH, the country’s main center for mental health care services catering to an average of 3,000 daily inpatients and 56,000 outpatients a year.

Now, the facility appears to be in even more dire straits, with crude rank-pulling and the suppression of information complicating its own fight against COVID-19. How ironic that the NCMH’s 24/7 crisis hotline slogan does not seem to apply to its own staff, who have to signal for outside help. The slogan? “Tara, Usap Tayo! (Come, let’s talk!)”

**************************************

National Center for Mental Health chief denies cover-ups on COVID-19 cases

Angel Movido, ABS-CBN News

April 09 2020

MANILA – The head of the National Center for Mental Health (NCMH) denied Thursday covering up coronavirus cases inside the institution after one of its officials allegedly released statements to the media on the facility’s response to the crisis.

The hospital is following policies of the Department of Health when it comes to reporting COVID-19 cases, said NCMH chief Dr. Roland Cortez after he barred the center’s chief administrative officer Clarita Avila from speaking in behalf of the facility.

“It’s not a gag order, but to inform her of the policy on COVID-19,” Cortez told ABS-CBN News.

“We are not covering up. Why? We submit reports to the DOH everyday. There is an existing policy naman. We are just doing our job to protect the interest of our patients,” he added.

Avila was earlier quoted by a news network (not ABS-CBN News) as saying that over half of the psychiatrists at the NCMH were under quarantine due to COVID-19.

“Well, obviously, it’s a cover-up of his mismanagement of the crisis and denying the public the right to information of what’s happening here at NCMH, aside from suppressing my freedom of speech,” Avila said in a text message to ABS-CBN News Thursday.

Cortez denied curtailing Avila’s freedom of speech, saying the Mandaluyong-based facility reports to the DOH and the local government.

“Wala kaming kinu-curtail. Yung transparency of cases were submitted to the DOH and the local governments because these should be reported,” Cortez insisted.

As of Thursday, Cortez said the hospital has a total of 39 COVID-19 cases, 30 of which involve NCMH employees, and 6 are psychiatric patients. Three other patients died, he said.

The NCMH chief also admitted that 565 employees of the facility are on home quarantine after being classified as persons under investigation (PUI), and persons under monitoring (PUM).

Of the said figure, 29 are resident doctors, and 28 are psychiatric consultants.

LACKING MEDICAL GEAR AND THREATS?

Avila also claimed earlier that the NCMH only had 50 sets of personal protective equipment, and that medical staff and employees rely heavily on donations for protective gear and food.

Cortez said the facility has a total of 3,300 PPEs that include recent donations from the DOH.

“What’s really depressing, sinasabi niya, we only rely on donations? It is not true. It is not true that we only have 50 PPEs. We already also offer food for them because this is an era where all of us have to help,” the NCMH chief said.

Some posts on social media carried calls to help frontliners at the NCMH, particularly PPEs and meals to be sent to the NCMH Physicians’ Association Inc.

Doctors, however, declined to discuss the initiative.

“I’d like to apologize. I cannot grant the interview because DOH and NCMH have media protocol,” Dr. Agnes Casiño, board member of the NCMH-PAI, said in a text message.

One employee, who requested for anonymity, claimed Cortez tried to threaten doctors asking for donations.

“He threatened na kakasuhan yung mga doktor na mag-donation drive. Bawal daw yun,” an employee from the NCMH said.

Cortez, however, said he is only following rules and policies for donations.

“We are not stopping them, because that is their prerogative. Kung may association ‘yun, okay yun,” he said.

“Huwag nila ipa-deliver sa NCMH (yung donations). We will be accountable to COA (Commission on Audit) in the future,” he added.

NO SKELETAL WORKFORCE

The employee who requested anonymity also claimed that Cortez did not allow a skeletal workforce for psychiatrists and psychologists.

“Parang, we are helpless talaga. It fell on deaf ears. Hindi pinag-skeletal. Mga suggestion namin, rejected lahat. Kaya ayan, marami na kaming COVID positive,” the employee told ABS-CBN News.

“Ngayon, nung kumalat yan, may nagreklamo. Tsaka, niya pinayagan yung mga skeletal,” the employee added.

Cortez said he only disagreed with a skeletal workforce for those working on mandatory face-to-face treatment for patients. Those working on psychiatric cases, he said, were allowed.

The NCMH chief also assured that blood tests, X-rays, and swab tests are done on in-house patients, along with the daily disinfection of their areas. A triage area has also been set up at the entrance of the institution.

One of the areas of the hospital was converted to an isolation area for in-house patients who were considered as PUIs, Cortez said.

NCMH doctors and medical staff, meanwhile, may choose to go on home quarantine, or be housed at the city’s isolation area at Nepthali Gonzales Integrated School, just a few meters away from NCMH.

Cortez called on employees of the NCMH to refrain from creating confusion and spreading fears to the public.

“I can assure families of patients who are here at the NCMH that we are doing our best to help them fight COVID-19,” he said.

QC is the WUHAN CITY of the Philippines, 19% of national total, 942 confirmed positive cases out of 4932

joy 936 a

QC – Covid 19 Capital of the Philippines. Incompetence. PALPAK. Joy Para sa Bayan. Pacute pa more.

PHOTO – Biz permit with number

**************************

DOH: 60 deaths, 64 recoveries, 942 COVID-19 cases in QC

Jervis Manahan, ABS-CBN News

April 14, 2020 

 

Total recoveries of the novel coronavirus in Quezon City have outnumbered the number of total deaths, as confirmed by the city’s health department on Monday.

As of April 13, there are 64 total recoveries in the city while recording a total of 60 deaths.

However, the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the city has continued to soar.

Based from data from the Department of Health, the total number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in Quezon City reached 942 as of Monday.

Meanwhile, the local government also reported that the HOPE 1 quarantine facility they have established is now at full capacity with 23 confirmed cases and 17 probable cases.

Their HOPE 2 facilities have 91 more beds that can accommodate patients in case the numbers continue to rise in the coming days.

On the first day of community-based COVID19 testing, 167 people from various parts of the city took part in the pilot stage of the program.

The testing area in the Quezon Memorial Circle has facilities for swabbing, blood testing, and x-rays.

The local government officials said people who want to be tested may coordinate with their barangay health officials for a preliminary interview and evaluation.

City Mayor Joy Belmonte also issued an order against the rejection of COVID-19 deaths in funeral homes. This comes after reports of funeral homes refusing to process cadavers from either suspected or confirmed COVID19-related deaths.

The ordinance also prohibits increase in crematory and funeral service fees.

MENTAL HOSPITAL – HOY GISING! April 9 pa last data – 39 covid 19 POSITIVE (28 MDs and BSNs, 2 employees, 6 patients while 3 patients died)

19 masks 3

MATUMAL ang labas ng balita. Sa ganyang sakunang pangkalusugan, dapat arawaraw may update para malaman ng pambansang pamunuan at LGU kung anong tulong ang kailangang ibigay. Sabi naman ng NCMH na malimit naman daw sila magbigay ng report sa Department of Health at DoH ang tagapagbalita sa publiko.

*********************

Gag order for National Center for Mental Health woes

Philippine Daily Inquirer
April 14, 2020

On Black Saturday, GMA-7 newscaster Arnold Clavio exploded a bombshell when he posted information he said he got about a hospital where dead bodies were piling up in the hallways due to a lack of body bags, and the hospital staff had been allegedly ordered to stop the tally of COVID-19 deaths. Following swift public furor, Health Secretary Francisco Duque III immediately denied there was any instruction for hospitals to stop counting fatalities from the outbreak, and the East Avenue Medical Center eventually admitted it was the facility in question. However, the bodies were not in the hospital hallway, it said, but in the morgue hallway. Per a CNN Philippines interview with the hospital spokesperson, as of 4 p.m. Saturday, “6 bodies remain uncollected in the morgue.”

It’s likely that, because of the public uproar that prodded health authorities to spring to action in a matter of hours, the hospital’s appeal for more protective equipment for its personnel, as well as body bags and a mobile freezer to augment its morgue facility, would be addressed soon.

The situation at the country’s largest facility for mental health patients came to light when its chief administrative officer Clarita Avila disclosed that, as of April 5, 34 of the NCMH staff were positive for COVID-19, 28 of them doctors and nurses. In addition, 297 of its employees became PUIs or patients under investigation while 181 were PUMs or patients under monitoring. Of the center’s 83 psychiatrists, 50 were under self-quarantine. Three patients had also died of the disease.

Already, 30 percent of NCMH’s more than 1,000 nursing staff no longer report for work as they are either PUIs or PUMs, or are simply afraid to go to work for lack of personal protective equipment, said Avila. Appealing for help, she noted that the facility only had 100 pieces left from 586 PPEs, all of them from private donors. That appalling situation should have roused Duque et al. to address the matter pronto. Instead, the response to Avila’s appeal was a gag order.

In a letter posted on the hospital’s Facebook page, NCMH head Dr. Roland Cortez told Avila to stand down: “This is to inform you that you are not the spokesperson of NCMH, you are not a member of the NCMH COVID-19 committee and not even a member of the expanded management committee of the hospital.” Avila was ordered to “refrain from issuing statements about COVID-19 because this function is under DOH Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire.’’

But if reports are submitted to higher-ups every day, the situation under Cortez’s watch has apparently gone unresolved—or been kept under wraps—such that, on top of Avila having to turn whistleblower with her disclosures, an “open letter’’ from a health care worker in the NCMH backed up her claims with more damning details. The letter lamented, among others, the failure by hospital management to provide protective equipment and food to its frontliners, and that Cortez allegedly refused to implement skeletal workforce arrangements until the situation turned for the worse.

The situation at the NCMH is dead-serious, and demands utmost transparency and decisive action from health authorities to contain the spread of COVID-19 among a particularly vulnerable set of people. But how does gagging Avila protect the interest of the NCMH patients, or its workers? That desperate frontliners have to resort to airing their sentiments anonymously can only speak of the dysfunctional state of affairs at the facility. A doctor even had to appeal to Vice President Leni Robredo to include the NMCH in the routes serviced by vehicles for health care workers.

Even before the pandemic, there have been reports about the dilapidated facilities and insufficient budget for the 90-year-old NCMH, the country’s main center for mental health care services catering to an average of 3,000 daily inpatients and 56,000 outpatients a year.

Now, the facility appears to be in even more dire straits, with crude rank-pulling and the suppression of information complicating its own fight against COVID-19. How ironic that the NCMH’s 24/7 crisis hotline slogan does not seem to apply to its own staff, who have to signal for outside help. The slogan? “Tara, Usap Tayo! (Come, let’s talk!)”

**************************************

National Center for Mental Health chief denies cover-ups on COVID-19 cases

Angel Movido, ABS-CBN News

April 09 2020

MANILA – The head of the National Center for Mental Health (NCMH) denied Thursday covering up coronavirus cases inside the institution after one of its officials allegedly released statements to the media on the facility’s response to the crisis.

The hospital is following policies of the Department of Health when it comes to reporting COVID-19 cases, said NCMH chief Dr. Roland Cortez after he barred the center’s chief administrative officer Clarita Avila from speaking in behalf of the facility.

“It’s not a gag order, but to inform her of the policy on COVID-19,” Cortez told ABS-CBN News.

“We are not covering up. Why? We submit reports to the DOH everyday. There is an existing policy naman. We are just doing our job to protect the interest of our patients,” he added.

Avila was earlier quoted by a news network (not ABS-CBN News) as saying that over half of the psychiatrists at the NCMH were under quarantine due to COVID-19.

“Well, obviously, it’s a cover-up of his mismanagement of the crisis and denying the public the right to information of what’s happening here at NCMH, aside from suppressing my freedom of speech,” Avila said in a text message to ABS-CBN News Thursday.

Cortez denied curtailing Avila’s freedom of speech, saying the Mandaluyong-based facility reports to the DOH and the local government.

“Wala kaming kinu-curtail. Yung transparency of cases were submitted to the DOH and the local governments because these should be reported,” Cortez insisted.

As of Thursday, Cortez said the hospital has a total of 39 COVID-19 cases, 30 of which involve NCMH employees, and 6 are psychiatric patients. Three other patients died, he said.

The NCMH chief also admitted that 565 employees of the facility are on home quarantine after being classified as persons under investigation (PUI), and persons under monitoring (PUM).

Of the said figure, 29 are resident doctors, and 28 are psychiatric consultants.

LACKING MEDICAL GEAR AND THREATS?

Avila also claimed earlier that the NCMH only had 50 sets of personal protective equipment, and that medical staff and employees rely heavily on donations for protective gear and food.

Cortez said the facility has a total of 3,300 PPEs that include recent donations from the DOH.

“What’s really depressing, sinasabi niya, we only rely on donations? It is not true. It is not true that we only have 50 PPEs. We already also offer food for them because this is an era where all of us have to help,” the NCMH chief said.

Some posts on social media carried calls to help frontliners at the NCMH, particularly PPEs and meals to be sent to the NCMH Physicians’ Association Inc.

Doctors, however, declined to discuss the initiative.

“I’d like to apologize. I cannot grant the interview because DOH and NCMH have media protocol,” Dr. Agnes Casiño, board member of the NCMH-PAI, said in a text message.

One employee, who requested for anonymity, claimed Cortez tried to threaten doctors asking for donations.

“He threatened na kakasuhan yung mga doktor na mag-donation drive. Bawal daw yun,” an employee from the NCMH said.

Cortez, however, said he is only following rules and policies for donations.

“We are not stopping them, because that is their prerogative. Kung may association ‘yun, okay yun,” he said.

“Huwag nila ipa-deliver sa NCMH (yung donations). We will be accountable to COA (Commission on Audit) in the future,” he added.

NO SKELETAL WORKFORCE

The employee who requested anonymity also claimed that Cortez did not allow a skeletal workforce for psychiatrists and psychologists.

“Parang, we are helpless talaga. It fell on deaf ears. Hindi pinag-skeletal. Mga suggestion namin, rejected lahat. Kaya ayan, marami na kaming COVID positive,” the employee told ABS-CBN News.

“Ngayon, nung kumalat yan, may nagreklamo. Tsaka, niya pinayagan yung mga skeletal,” the employee added.

Cortez said he only disagreed with a skeletal workforce for those working on mandatory face-to-face treatment for patients. Those working on psychiatric cases, he said, were allowed.

The NCMH chief also assured that blood tests, X-rays, and swab tests are done on in-house patients, along with the daily disinfection of their areas. A triage area has also been set up at the entrance of the institution.

One of the areas of the hospital was converted to an isolation area for in-house patients who were considered as PUIs, Cortez said.

NCMH doctors and medical staff, meanwhile, may choose to go on home quarantine, or be housed at the city’s isolation area at Nepthali Gonzales Integrated School, just a few meters away from NCMH.

Cortez called on employees of the NCMH to refrain from creating confusion and spreading fears to the public.

“I can assure families of patients who are here at the NCMH that we are doing our best to help them fight COVID-19,” he said.

 

Quirino Hospital (morgue capacity 6 but 11 cadavers) at Lung Center (morgue capacity at 4 but 12 dead bodies) – nasa stretcher na ang mga patay

19 quirino lung center

COVID 19. Quarantine. Morgue. Overflow.

Nagsalita na rin ang Quirino Memorial Medical Center at Lung Center of the Philippines sa isyu ng mga bangkay na nagtatagal sa morge ng dalawang ospital sa halip na macremate na agad ang mga patay para hindi makapanghawa ng mga tao. Nauna nang naisiwalat ang katulad na problema sa East Avenue Medical Center kung saan tinambak sa pasilyo ang mga patay. Lima lang ang kapasidad ng morge ng EAMC habang umabot ng 20 ang mga bangkay na hindi kinuha ng mga kamaganak ng mga namatay. Sa Quirino, 6 lang ang kakayanan ng morge nila. Labingisa naman ang pinamarami nilang patay kaya sa mga stretcher na lang nilagay yung 5. Sa Lung Center of the Philippines,  12 ang patay habang 4 lang ang lugar sa morge.

Nabangit din ng Quirino na may isang bangkay daw sa kanila na 11 araw nang patay kaya nangangamoy na dahil naagnas na ang katawan.

April 13 – 4932 total cases, 284 new cases for today, 315 total deaths with 242 recovered patients.

*********************

Philippines: Hospitals must cremate Covid-19 victims in 12 hours, death toll now at 297

The Star
12 April 2020
MANILA: The Philippine government on Sunday (April 12) told hospitals and local government units to make sure that bodies of patients who died of the Covid-19 (coronavirus) are cremated within 12 hours, after a hospital admitted that bodies were piling up in its small morgue.

An inter-agency task force on the fight against Covid-19, the respiratory illness caused by the virus, imposed the 12-hour rule for cremation as part of the protocol for handling deceased patients amid the outbreak.

“We must stick to the 12-hour rule when it comes to cremation,” government official Karlo Nograles said.

The East Avenue Medical Center, one of the major hospitals handling Covid-19 patients in Manila, disclosed that its morgue did not have sufficient equipment, such as freezers, to store additional bodies.

The Philippines confirmed on Sunday 220 new Covid-19 cases, bringing the total number in the country to 4,648.

The Department of Health (DOH) also reported 50 more Covid-19 deaths, bringing the death toll to 297. The deaths include previously unreported cases and backlogs, the DOH said.

The DOH further said that 40 new patients have recovered, bringing the total of recoveries to 197.

The Department of Labour and Employment said that over 1 million workers have been affected by the extended lockdown imposed by the government since March 15 to curb the spread of the virus. The lockdown runs until April 30.

Labour Secretary Silvestre Bello those who worked in the formal sector were either affected by temporary closures or flexible work arrangements.

Meanwhile, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez said the government is to mobilize 1.17 trillion pesos-worth (US$23.19bil) of fiscal and monetary measures to date to help defeat the viral disease and provide relief to the poor and other sectors reeling from this pandemic’s economic hit. – dpa/Asian News Network

#COVID19

COVID 19 : East Avenue – Umaming tambak ang PATAY (20), morge 5 lang ang kasya kaya sa PASILYO na lang ang iba

19 arnold 1

PALPAK ang Quezon City. Kyusi ay COVID CAPITAL of the PHILIPPINES na may 764 confirmed positive cases out of a national total of 4428 (as of two days ago). Salamat Arnold Clavio.

Mga PATAY hindi kinukuha ng mga kamaganak kaya dumami ang UNCLAIMED BODIES na umabot sa 20. Si Arnold Clavio ang unang nagsiwalat ng balita ngunit hindi niya pinangalanan ang ospital. Napilitan tuloy ang Department of Health at ang East Avenue Medical Center maglabas ng mga pahayag para PATUNAYAN ang pinasabog ni Arn Arn.

Sa una, marami ang nagakala na FAKE NEWS yung balita para lang daw siraan ang pamahalaan ngunit mabuti na lang at nagsabi ng TOTOO ang DOH at EAMC.

Maliwanag naman na PERA ang sanhi ng hindi pagkuha ng mga bangkay. Lalo pa ngayong CREMATION ang nararapat. 65 to 200 thousand pesos daw ang halaga nito kaya sa panahon ng PAMBANSANG SAKUNANG PANGKALUSUGAN, ang mga Local Government Units ang dapat umayos ng ganiyang CREMATION. Nasa Quezon City ang EAMC kaya responsibilidad ni Mayor Joy Belmonte yan. Dahil sa sobrang nakakahawa ang COVID 19, dapat ilang oras lang matapos mamatay ang isang pasyente ay CREMATED na agad. Matatandaan na ang Quezon City ay may bagong bukas na modernong CREMATORIUM na may 2 kalan so hindi dapat naipon ang mga bangkay sa pasilyo ng ospital.

Sa huling panayam ng EAMC, nabawasan na daw ang mga bangkay na nasa kanila pa. 8 na lang daw yun lang 5 lang ang kaya nilang maitago ng maayos kaya mayroon pa ring mga patay sa pasilyo. Malayo naman daw ito sa main hospital pero hindi pa rin magandang pangitain yan sa aspeto ng proper health practices.

CHAMPION ang Quezon City sa dami ng COVID 19. Nakapagtala na ng 764 na kumpirmadong positibo sa gitna ng kabuuang 4428 sa buong Pilipinas. 17.2% ito sa ngayon at tumataas pa ang porciento nito. Ibig sabihin mas mabilis kumalat ang coronavirus sa Quezon City kaysa sa ibang parte ng Pilipinas.

 

Barangay captain, mga kagawad ng Barangay 129 Caloocan City sumuko na.

Patupada. Biyernes Santo. Sementeryo. Quarantine. Physical Distancing.

Photo: Current barangay captain Brix Reyes (right) in file photo when he was still a barangay kagawad when his father (left) was the barangay captain.

19 cal kap

Caloocan barangay execs in cockfighting surrender to face raps

By: Consuelo Marquez – INQUIRER
April 11, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — Officials of Barangay 129 in Caloocan who are allegedly involved in illegal cockfighting at the Manila North Cemetery, surrendered to authorities on Black Saturday, according to Caloocan Mayor Oscar Malapitan.

Earlier, Manila Mayor Isko Moreno and Malapitan appealed to the suspects — Barangay Chairman Brix John Reyes and Barangay Councilors Romulado Reyes and John Cris Domingo to yield to authorities.

Malapitan said administrative cases would be filed against the officials. In the meantime, they would be under preventive suspension.

He assured the officials that he would observe due process and allow them to give their response to the allegation.

 

*********************

Isko goes to barangay hall in Caloocan in search of ‘cockfighting’ execs

By: Consuelo Marquez – INQUIRER
April 11, 2020

MANILA, Philippines — A visibly angry Manila Mayor Isko Moreno on Saturday personally paid a visit to Barangay 129 in neighboring Caloocan City in search of its barangay chairman and other officials who are wanted for alleged illegal cockfighting activities done at the Manila North Cemetery on Good Friday, and even while the enhanced community quarantine is in place.

Escorted by police and some men, Moreno’s vehicle stopped in front of the barangay hall to appeal for suspects Barangay chairman Brix John Reyes, Councilors Romualdo Reyes, John Cris Domingo and a certain alyas Kabron of Barangay 131 to surrender before the Manila Police District.

“Kung meron kayong impormasyon sa inyong chairman, or kamag anak nyo si chairman… sabihan nyo na sila na kusang loob na magpaliwanag sa pamahalaang lungsod ng Maynila,” Moreno told barangay residents via megaphone, a video of which was posted in his Facebook page.

Moreno gave the barangay officials 48 hours to show up and surrender.

“Wala kayong patawad maski Semana Santa, Biyernes Santo. Aaraw-arawin ko kayo, mga halal kayo ng bayan, para kayong hangal,” he told the barangay officials, who did not come out during the visit.

Moreno also said that if the suspects would not surrender, they will be treated as “regular criminals.”

In a report from Manila Police District Special Mayor’s Reaction Team, the barangay officials evaded arrest during a joint operation at the cemetery on Good Friday.

Aside from Moreno, Caloocan mayor Oscar Malapitan likewise urged the barangay officials to yield to authorities.

In a Facebook post, Caloocan City Mayor Oscar Malapitan said if the barangay officials fail to surrender, he will order the police to conduct a manhunt operation against them.

“Kung hindi kusang susuko sa pulisya, sinabi ni Mayor Oca na ipag-uutos niya ang manhunt laban sa mga opisyal,” he said.

(If they will not surrender to police, Mayor Oca will order a manhunt against the officials.)

 

#COVID19 #IskoMoreno

 

COVID 19 – Mayora Joy Belmonte, Quezon City Crematorium ANYARE?

qc arnell crematorium

EAMC – 15 to 20 bodies pile up

Malaking gulo at pagkatakot ang nadulot ng East Avenue Medical Center matapos ibunyag ng beteranong mediaman Arnold Clavio na nakatambak na sa pasilyo ang mga bangkay sa hindi niya binanggit na pangalan na ospital. Yung pagsabog na iyon ang naging rason para magsalita na sa wakas ang EAMC. Nilinaw nila na wala naman daw pagtatakip o pagtatago ng mga pigura ng may COVID 19 at ang mga namatay dahil dito. Yun lang pinadala na raw nila ang mga naturang bilang at ang Department of Health na ang bahalang maglabas ng balita sa publiko. Inamin din nila na nasa 15 hanggang 20 ang naipong mga bangkay sa ospital sa kadahilanang hindi ito kinukuha ng mga kamaganak. Sa araw ng interview, may anim pa raw ang naiiwang mga patay na nasa morgue nila. Maliwanag sa naturang interview na may pagkukulang ang DoH sa paggawa ng COVID 19 testing sapagkat April 2 figures pa ang binanggit (7 daw ang positive sa EAMC kung saan 1 ang namatay) sa kabila ng April 11 na ang araw ng pagkalathala ng istorya.

Maliwanag naman na ang gastos ng pagcremate ang rason kung bakit hindi kinukuha o matagal kunin ang mga bangkay. Di po ba may bagong crematorium ang Quezon City at full media coverage pa ang pagbubukas nito? So bakit hindi ayusin ng pamahalaang lungsod ang cremation? Kapunapuna na ang EAMC ay walking distance lang sa Quezon City Hall pero halatang kulang ang pagalalay ng Pamahalaang Lungsod sa EAMC. Ang isyu po natin dito ay hindi po ligtas na ang mga bangkay ay hindi pa nacremate ilang oras o araw matapos mamatay. May posibilidad po na makapagkalat pa ng sakit.

Si Mayor Joy Belmonte ay umani ng batikos sapagkat sa pananaw ni Arnell Ignacio ay inuna pa ang cremtorium kaysa pagbigay pagkain sa mga mahihirap. Sa kwento ng EAMC, tila maski crematorium hindi nabigyan ng kaukulang alalay.

Ang Quezon City ay ang lungsod o munisipyo na may pinamaraming COVID 19 positive, 764 ang bilang at sa buong bansa naman ay may 4428. Ibig sabihin 17.2% ng COVID 19 positive sa buong Pilipinas ay nasa QC.

**************

East Avenue Medical Center could need mortuary freezer, as unclaimed bodies increase

Kristine Sabillo, ABS-CBN News

April 11, 2020

 

MANILA — The East Avenue Medical Center (EAMC) has denied reports that it is running out of body bags or it has been told to stop counting COVID-19 fatalities.

But the hospital does need mortuary freezers after more bodies of patients under investigation for COVID-19 remain unclaimed in the morgue.

“Past few days starting this week, nag-pile up ang ating cadavers, umaabot ng 15 to 20 ang ating cadavers,” Dr. Dennis Ordoña, EAMC spokesperson, told ABS-CBN News in a phone interview on Saturday.

(Past few days starting this week, the cadavers started piling up. There were 15 to 20 cadavers.)

“’Yung capacity ng morgue is hanggang 5 lang,” he added.

(The capacity of the morgue is up to 5 only.)

Ordoña said some of the bodies, which were properly kept inside body bags, were placed in the hallway of the morgue but not inside the main hospital.

However, he said as of Saturday, the number of bodies in the morgue has gone down to 6.

“We’re actually looking for a portable morgue kung saan pwedeng ilagay ’yung freezer na ito. We’re actually looking for rentals. S’yempre merong donors, highly appreciated,” Ordoña said.

He said the hospital does not have freezers in the morgue, because in the past bodies were immediately retrieved by relatives within six hours after death.

Ordoña said it’s hard to pinpoint the cause of the delay.

“Ang mga pamilya hindi rin agresibo na mag-check o asikasuhin ’yung remains ng kanilang kamag-anak,” he said. “Doon naman sa Quezon City health department, ang alam namin puno na ang slots ng cremation.”

(Families do not immediately check and tend to the remains of their relative . . . With the Quezon City health department, we were told that slots for cremation have been filled up.)

However, he said he is not sure if this is still true. He said mass cremation is the responsibility of the local government unit so his hospital is not aware if there are indeed problems.

ABS-CBN News tried contacting the Quezon City LGU for comments but has yet to get a response.

Ordoña said the problem started this week.

“Doon medyo nagsisimula na mag-pile up ’yung aming cadaver,” he said. “Nasa morgue. Nandu’n sila. Although walang freezer. ’Yun ’yung issue namin.”

(That’s when the cadavers started piling up . . . They are in the morgue, although we don’t have a freezer. That’s the issue now.)

He assured the public that the area is well-ventilated and that employees entering the morgue wear gas masks and personal protective equipment, as a precautionary measure since the COVID-19 test results for the patients have yet to be released.

Quezon City is one of the cities that have designated a crematorium for COVID-related cases. The Department of Health said on Saturday that other LGUs should also put up such a facility.

If relatives are unable to have a PUI cremated, they would have to resort to bringing the body to a private crematorium.

Ordoña said this would cost the families P65,000 to P200,000 and many are unable to shoulder the expense.

He said relatives end up waiting in line for a slot and that the hospital would assist to expedite the process since the official recommendation for COVID-19 and PUI fatalities is for cremation within 12 hours of the time of death.

As for body bags, Ordoña said the supply is enough since they only use about 10 to 15 body bags a day for the whole hospital and not just COVID-19 cases.

He said while the LGU was able to retrieve the bodies for cremation, the hospital still needs a mortuary freezer.

He also assured the public that the bodies are “well respected” and that protocols are being followed to ensure the safety of health care workers in the hospital.

While the EAMC did not say how many COVID-19 cases there are in the hospital because of the centralized reporting required by the DOH, based on the DOH’s Summary of Positive Cases and Case Bulletins, EAMC had 7 COVID-19 patients as of April 2, one of whom died. The DOH has yet to release new data on COVID-19 cases, including a breakdown for hospitals, as it deals with backlog entries.

As of Saturday, there were 4,428 confirmed COVID-19 cases in the Philippines. Of that number, 247 have died and 157 have recovered. The DOH has not yet released an updated number of PUIs.

***********************************

East Avenue Medical Center says daily COVID-related deaths at 3 the most, not 10

ABS-CBN News

April 11, 2020

MANILA–The East Avenue Medical Center in Quezon City on Saturday denied it was logging 10 deaths daily due to the novel coronavirus, an allegation that surfaced on social media.

“The actual number of COVID related deaths vary only from zero to 2 hanggang 3 per day. Ito ’yung mga PUI at COVID positive,” Dr. Dennis Ordoña, spokesperson of EAMC, told ABS-CBN News in a phone interview.

“Hindi namin alam kung sa’n galing ang data na 10. Pwede rin kasi na kina-count ’yung number of deaths even outside of the COVID, pero parang hindi pa rin.”

Ordoña also denied that the Department of Health ordered the hospital to halt the counting of COVID-19 fatalities.

“Definitely wala itong katotohanan. Kami naman ay walang rason para kami ay magtago ng number of deaths ng mga pasyente kasi wala naman mag-iiba kung maraming namamatay or konti lang ’yung namamatay,” he said.

If a patient who has shown symptoms of COVID-19 dies, that person cannot be recorded as a fatality of the disease until the patient tests positive, the doctor clarified further.

Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire earlier told ABS-CBN News that her department was not holding back hospital tallies.

“We have not issued any policy or instruction for non-reporting of deaths,” she said in a message.

In a tweet, DOH chief Francisco Duque III also said that “the DOH did NOT and will NEVER issue a directive for hospitals to conceal the number of COVID-19 deaths.”

Dr. Alfonso Nuñez, medical chief of the EAMC, said in a text message to ABS-CBN News that the hospital does not publicly disclose such numbers because reporting of cases from hospitals has been centralized by the DOH.

Based on the DOH’s Summary of Positive Cases and Case Bulletins, EAMC had 7 COVID-19 patients as of April 2, one of whom died. The DOH has yet to release new data on COVID-19 cases. — With reports from Isay Reyes and Kristine Sabillo, ABS-CBN News

 

#COVID19

BREAKING NEWS: Caloocan Barangay 129 Barangay Captain Brix John Reyes and Kagawad Alias Tenga SURRENDER to Caloocan Mayor Malapitan.

isko cal malapitan kap kagawad

Biyernes Santo. Quarantine. Tupada. COVID 19. North Cemetery (sa Manila). Mga barangay officials ng Caloocan ang mga pasimuno. Pinasusuko ni Isko. Barangay captain Brix of Caloocan barangay 129 among those named.

#COVID 19

Manila Bulletin News
April 11, 2020
Both Caloocan Mayor Oca Malapitan and Manila Mayor Isko Moreno have called on 5 Caloocan barangay officials to surrender to authorities after escaping when they were caught engaging in an illegal cockfighting inside Manila North Cemetery on Good Friday.
******************

5 Caloocan village execs in cemetery cockfight asked to yield

Tempo
0

The city government of Caloocan has asked the five Barangay 129 officials to surrender to authorities after they were caught on Good Friday engaging in illegal cockfighting inside the Manila North Cemetery while close to each other despite the social distancing guidelines imposed due to COVID-19.

Caloocan Mayor Oca Malapitan said he would not hesitate to order a manhunt operation against them should they not surrender themselves to the police.The city government of Caloocan has asked the five Barangay 129 officials to surrender to authorities after they were caught on Good Friday engaging in illegal cockfighting inside the Manila North Cemetery while close to each other despite the social distancing guidelines imposed due to COVID-19.

“Hindi natin kailanman kukunsintihin ang mga maling gawa ng ating mga opisyal. Magsasagawa ng sariling imbestigasyon ang Pamahalaang Lungsod ng Caloocan para maberepika ang sumbong,” he added.

Malapitan’s warning came after Manila Mayor Francisco “Isko Moreno” Domagoso, through a Facebook live video, disclosed that the five officials are still at large after escaping when they were caught engaging in illegal cockfighting with dozens of other men.

Citing a report from the Manila Police District, Moreno and Malapitan identified them as Chairman Brix John Reyes and Councilors Ronnie Ignacio, Alfie Lacson, Romualdo Reyes, and John Cris Domingo.

“Ano kayang mararamdaman ninyo sa mga taong ito na naturingang barangay opisyal…ginawa po nila yung pagsasabong sa loob ng sementeryo kung saan nahihimlay nang mapayapa ang inyong mga mahal sa buhay,” Moreno said.

“Walang galang sa mga patay. Walang galang sa batas,” Moreno added.

Moreno  gave them 48 hours to show themselves to the city government of Manila.

Malapitan  said he would not hesitate to impose administrative sanctions against them.

“Hindi ako mag-aatubili na patawan ng kaukulang parusang administratibo kabilang na ang pagpapasuspinde sa kanila,” he said. (Joseph Pedrajas)

Isko Moreno SUMUGOD sa Barangay 129, Caloocan City

isko cal megaphone

GOOD FRIDAY. SABONG. QUARANTINE. PHYSICAL DISTANCING. CEMETERY. Lack of respect for the dead.

Si Manila Mayor Isko Moreno ay personal na pumunta sa Lungsod ng Kalookan upang siya mismo ang manghikayat sa mga pinaghihinalaang opisyales ng Barangay 129 na sumuko na. Ang mga Lungsod ng Kalookan at Maynila ay magkadikit lamang kaya dumaan si Yorme sa naturang barangay na pader lang ang naghihiwalay sa North Cemetery (sakop ng Maynila) kung saan naganap ang isang TUPADA nuong Biyernes Santo. Ang buong Luzon ay nasa malawakang quarantine dala ng COVID 19 pandemic kaya bawal ang pagtitipontipon ng maraming mga tao. Kita sa mga larawan na nakatapak ang mga manonood ng sabong sa mga nitso at dikitdikit din sila at nalalagay sa panganib ang kalusugan nila sapagkat baka kumalat ang coronavirus. Maganda ang pagtanggap kay Yorme ng mga pangkaraniwang mamamayan ng Barangay 129 at tila mga tagahanga sila ni Isko na isang artista bago pumasok sa pulitika.

PHOTO: Mayor Isko nagsasalita sa megaphone para banggitin ang mga pangalan ng mga dapat sumuko. Makikita sa gusali sa likod ang pangalan ng isang barangay kagawad na kasama sa mga pinasusuko.

***********************

Caloocan mayor Malapitan asks barangay officials to surrender due to alleged illegal cockfighting

Malapitan said the illegal cockfighting (“patupada”) allegedly happened in Manila North Cemetery.

“Nananawagan si Caloocan City Mayor Oscar ‘OCA’ Malapitan sa ilang opisyales ng Barangay 129 ng Lungsod ng Caloocan, kabilang ang kanilang Barangay Chairman na sumuko sa kapulisan at magpaliwanag. Ito’y makaraang matukoy na sila ang promotor ng isang patupada sa loob ng Manila North Cemetery nitong nakaraang Biyerne Santo,” a post on his Facebook account read.

Malapitan said if they do not surrender to police, he will be forced to order that a manhunt be launched to determine their whereabouts.

The mayor said the Manila Police District identified the officials allegedly involved in the illegal cockfighting activity as Barangay 129 chairman Brix John Rolly Reyes, and kagawad Alfie Lacson, Romualdo Reyes and John Cris Domingo.

The alleged illegal cockfighting occurred at noontime on Good Friday, April 10, on 29th Street inside Manila North Cemetery, Sta. Cruz, Manila.

One of those arrested pointed to the Caloocan barangay officials as the ones who allegedly organized the event.

Aside from charges of illegal gambling, the suspects may be faced with charges of violation of Republic Act 11469 or the Bayanihan to Heal as One Act. —KG, GMA News

Isko Moreno – in 48 hours, pinasusuko ang mga Caloocan barangay officials dahil sa SABONG ng Biyernes Santo sa Sementeryo

Biyernes Santo. Quarantine. Tupada. COVID 19. North Cemetery (sa Manila). Mga barangay officials ng Caloocan ang mga pasimuno. Pinasusuko ni Isko. Barangay captain Brix of Caloocan barangay 129 among those named.

isko cal 2

#COVID 19

Manila Bulletin News
April 11, 2020
Both Caloocan Mayor Oca Malapitan and Manila Mayor Isko Moreno have called on 5 Caloocan barangay officials to surrender to authorities after escaping when they were caught engaging in an illegal cockfighting inside Manila North Cemetery on Good Friday.
******************

5 Caloocan village execs in cemetery cockfight asked to yield

Tempo
0

The city government of Caloocan has asked the five Barangay 129 officials to surrender to authorities after they were caught on Good Friday engaging in illegal cockfighting inside the Manila North Cemetery while close to each other despite the social distancing guidelines imposed due to COVID-19.

Caloocan Mayor Oca Malapitan said he would not hesitate to order a manhunt operation against them should they not surrender themselves to the police.The city government of Caloocan has asked the five Barangay 129 officials to surrender to authorities after they were caught on Good Friday engaging in illegal cockfighting inside the Manila North Cemetery while close to each other despite the social distancing guidelines imposed due to COVID-19.

“Hindi natin kailanman kukunsintihin ang mga maling gawa ng ating mga opisyal. Magsasagawa ng sariling imbestigasyon ang Pamahalaang Lungsod ng Caloocan para maberepika ang sumbong,” he added.

Malapitan’s warning came after Manila Mayor Francisco “Isko Moreno” Domagoso, through a Facebook live video, disclosed that the five officials are still at large after escaping when they were caught engaging in illegal cockfighting with dozens of other men.

Citing a report from the Manila Police District, Moreno and Malapitan identified them as Chairman Brix John Reyes and Councilors Ronnie Ignacio, Alfie Lacson, Romualdo Reyes, and John Cris Domingo.

“Ano kayang mararamdaman ninyo sa mga taong ito na naturingang barangay opisyal…ginawa po nila yung pagsasabong sa loob ng sementeryo kung saan nahihimlay nang mapayapa ang inyong mga mahal sa buhay,” Moreno said.

“Walang galang sa mga patay. Walang galang sa batas,” Moreno added.

Moreno  gave them 48 hours to show themselves to the city government of Manila.

Malapitan  said he would not hesitate to impose administrative sanctions against them.

“Hindi ako mag-aatubili na patawan ng kaukulang parusang administratibo kabilang na ang pagpapasuspinde sa kanila,” he said. (Joseph Pedrajas)