Philippines to open COVID-19 vaccinations to include more workers

June 7, 2021 - 3:51 PM
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Health workers provide vaccination cards to residents recently inoculated with AstraZeneca vaccine against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), inside a bus converted into a mobile vaccination site in Taguig, Metro Manila, Philippines, May 21, 2021. (Reuters/Lisa Marie David)

MANILA — The Philippines will open up its vaccination drive this week to include around 35 million people working outside their homes, such as public transport staff, in a bid to help curb COVID-19 transmission and to open up the economy, officials said.

The next phase in the rollout that started in March comes after vaccines were initially targeted at health care workers, senior citizens and people with existing health conditions.

Presidential spokesman Harry Roque said those eligible to join the new phase, which includes workers in the informal sector, will be able to register from Wednesday, with the country expecting more vaccines to arrive in the second half.

The Philippines has so far received more than nine million doses, mostly supplied by China’s Sinovac Biotech, but has a long way to go to meet its goal of immunizing 70 million people this year out of a population of 110 million.

The country is also lagging some neighbors, with only 4.4 million people having received their first dose and more than 1.5 million two shots so far.

Opening the vaccination campaign to more people will allow the “process of reopening (the economy) to continue,” Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez told the same media briefing.

“This is a shot in the arm needed by our economic frontliners and our economy so the signs of recovery will continue.”

In order to help shore up confidence in the vaccine program and tackle vaccine hesitancy, local celebrities were among 50 people vaccinated in an inoculation ceremony on Monday.

The Philippines, which is battling one of the worst COVID-19 outbreaks in Asia, has reported 1.27 million infections and almost 22,000 deaths, with some provinces outside the capital region emerging as new hotspots for COVID-19. —Reporting by Neil Jerome Morales Editing by Ed Davies