House approves bill on mandatory COVID-19 tests for vulnerable citizens
By Ben Rosario
Vulnerable members of the society (VMS) will undergo mandatory baseline Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) testing for COVID-19 under a bill approved on third and final reading by the House of Representatives on Thursday night.
A total 240 congressmen voted in favor of House Bill 6865 to be known as the “Crushing COVID-19 Act.” Only one voted against it.
(Las Piñas City PIO / MANILA BULLETIN)
At least 80 House members registered as co-authors of the measure that was filed by Senior Deputy Minority Leader and Iloilo Rep. Janette Garin, a former secretary of health.
The bill will put in motion the “Test, Test, Test” program of the government.
HB 6865 provides that PCR or Baseline PCR Testing be established as a protocol for COVID-19 testing of VMS.
Covered by the mandatory baseline PCR Testing are patients or healthcare workers with severe or critical symptoms, mild symptoms and those who demonstrated no symptoms but with relevant history of travel or contact.
Also considered as VMS are the following:
(Las Piñas City PIO / MANILA BULLETIN)
At least 80 House members registered as co-authors of the measure that was filed by Senior Deputy Minority Leader and Iloilo Rep. Janette Garin, a former secretary of health.
The bill will put in motion the “Test, Test, Test” program of the government.
HB 6865 provides that PCR or Baseline PCR Testing be established as a protocol for COVID-19 testing of VMS.
Covered by the mandatory baseline PCR Testing are patients or healthcare workers with severe or critical symptoms, mild symptoms and those who demonstrated no symptoms but with relevant history of travel or contact.
Also considered as VMS are the following:
- Non-health frontliners responding against COVID 19 that include police, military and fire agency personnel; barangay health workers and officials; those connected in jail and prison management; swabbing and testing center workers and social workers, among others.
- Persons with co-morbidities and other health risks such as diabetes, heart disease, pulmonary diseases, cancer, obesity, pregnancy, renal failure, old age and other immunocompromised persons who are returning to work.
- Persons entering the Philippine territory from abroad.
- Workers who are holders of quarantine passes who do most of the errands for their families during the quarantine period.
- Patients required by their physicians to submit a PCR test result prior to a medical procedure or treatment.