The Department of Health (DOH) wants to get about three in five kids vaccinated with primary COVID-19 doses by the end of its three-day “Bakunahang Bayan” that started on Monday to strengthen their immunity, especially since they will have Christmas gatherings and year-end school activities.
DOH officer in charge Maria Rosario Vergeire said the current vaccination coverage among 5-11 years old is only around 49 percent, which means that an accomplishment rate of 11 percent must be achieved within this month’s special vaccination days.
In Metro Manila alone, more than half a million or 529,561 kids have yet to get their first two injections.
Teens age 12-17 are eligible for first booster shots but 158,519 of them in the capital region have yet to avail themselves of the additional doses.
Nationwide, fully vaccinated children age 5-11 were at 5.33 million out of the target 10.8 million kids as of Nov. 30. Booster doses are not yet allowed for this age group.
First booster coverage among 12-17 years old remained dismal at 12 percent of the target 8.9 million individuals.
Other segments eligible
The Bakunahang Bayan focused for the first time on expanding pediatric vaccination, although other segments of the population may still get their doses at vaccination sites during the three-day activity.
Vergeire cited continued hesitancy among parents due to misinformation about vaccine efficacy for the low inoculation rates.
“We’re still intensifying efforts on [disseminating information] to parents that vaccines are safe, effective and would be able to protect [against COVID-19],” said the health official in a press briefing on Tuesday.
“Please do not listen to mere hearsay and information that are not grounded on science,” she added.
In a separate press conference, Director Gloria Balboa of the Metro Manila Center for Health Development urged parents to have their kids jabbed as the “risk is high” this month because of the expected Christmas parties.
In a Dec. 2 order, the Department of Education allowed Christmas parties in public schools.
“It’s important now, especially among the youth who are considered a vulnerable group, [that they get vaccinated] because they are doing face-to-face classes,” said Balboa.
She stressed that having all students in a classroom vaccinated means that everyone has the same level of protection against the virus.
Vaccine purchase audit
Meanwhile, the DOH will have to “ask permission” from vaccine manufacturers with whom it had signed vaccine deals, should the agency be subpoenaed to release contract details, including the actual prices of the COVID-19 jabs.
Vergeire said included in the nondisclosure agreements (NDAs) and confidentiality disclosure agreements (CDAs) it signed with the vaccine makers are the vaccine costs.
But it is also covered by the “exemptions” stating that the information could be shared if required by law or an investigation, she noted.
“In terms of specific contracts [between the government and vaccine manufacturers], they are included in this special audit. Based on the agreements, these would be included and they would see the specific contracts,” Vergeire said.
She noted that vaccine cost was one of the highly confidential provisions of the contracts due to stiff “competition” and “market forces.”
In a message to the Inquirer, former Health Secretary Francisco Duque III said prices of the vaccines under the agreements should be covered in the audit.
“I would assume that all contract prices of vaccines are covered in the special audit, otherwise what’s the sense of the special audit if prices are not covered,” he said.
Duque has refuted Commission on Audit (COA) chief Gamaliel Cordoba’s claim last week that he had withheld documents on vaccine procurement deals because of the NDAs.
He said it was during his watch when the DOH, in a letter signed by then Undersecretary Mario Villaverde, asked the COA to start an audit of the three loan programs worth nearly $2 billion extended separately by the World Bank and Asian Development Bank. INQ