Brit dies in Cebu after being refused treatment.

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Kuya John
Posted
Posted
11 minutes ago, hk blues said:

As per my post above, my Filipina neighbour was refused treatment as they were concerned about Covid-19

Yes  having re-read the topic, it would appear that it is becoming critical, is that because of Covid or was that the case prior to any outbreak.

I realised due to distance to travel, one's condition might deteriorate,  but to refuse treatment.....I'm out.

 

 

 

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Shady
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Posted
3 hours ago, scott h said:

Happens all the time

Whatever happened to

Duterte warns hospitals: Admit patients or face suspension

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Jollygoodfellow
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Posted
6 hours ago, Snowy79 said:

I've been reading a few reports about this on Facebook.  Fingers crossed it's Fake News but not looking that way. 

The post I looked up on Facebook had this title, SHOCKING STORY CONFIRMED. But confirmed by who? Its probably true to a point but who knows.

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hk blues
Posted
Posted
2 hours ago, Kuya John said:

Yes  having re-read the topic, it would appear that it is becoming critical, is that because of Covid or was that the case prior to any outbreak.

I realised due to distance to travel, one's condition might deteriorate,  but to refuse treatment.....I'm out.

 

 

 

Just to be clear - For me, any hospital anywhere should accept any patient needing treatment if they have the resources to do so.  

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Kuya John
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Posted
4 minutes ago, hk blues said:

Just to be clear - For me, any hospital anywhere should accept any patient needing treatment if they have the resources to do so.  

Likewise :thumbsup:

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Mike J
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Posted

News article that speaks of the incident.

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1292757/cases-swamp-cebu-city-hospitals

CEBU CITY, Cebu, Philippines — The tragic deaths of a foreigner and a barangay chair while they waited for hours for urgent medical attention illustrated this city’s lack of capacity to provide critical care for new coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patients, which had prompted President Duterte to put it back under enhanced community quarantine (ECQ).

On Sunday, Barry Grote, a British national, was taken by his friends in an ambulance to a private hospital after he complained he had trouble breathing.

But the suspected COVID-19 patient could not be accommodated in the emergency room as 10 others were waiting in line ahead of him.

So he waited inside the ambulance from 2 p.m. until he suffered a cardiac arrest at 10 p.m
 
The ambulance and emergency room staff were unable to revive him.

A week earlier Manolita Abarquez, chair of Barangay Pardo who reportedly had pneumonia, died after at least seven hospitals refused to admit her as they were already full of patients.


Her live-in partner, Laurencia “Neneng” Pauya, who had diabetes, died two hours later.

Abarquez, 63, and Pauya were suspected to have been infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, a severe respiratory disease. The results of their swab tests have not been released.

One of Grote’s friends was presented a bill amounting to P39,000 for the 30-minute attempt to resuscitate him.

“He could still be alive today if not for that damn queue. Imagine, it was an emergency situation and yet he was made to wait for eight hours?,” said Byron Garcia, brother of Gov. Gwen Garcia and one of Grote’s friends who narrated the Briton’s ordeal on Facebook.

Filled beyond capacity
Following the deaths of Abarquez and Pauya, Cebu City Councilor Raymond Alvin Garcia vowed to draft an ordinance to compel hospitals to accept and provide enough beds for COVID-19 patients or those with flu-like symptoms.


The owners of an erring hospital would be made to pay a P5,000 fine or face jail time.

On Monday, Mr. Duterte ordered Cebu City to return to ECQ in which stricter quarantine measures, such as the closure of nonessential businesses and the cancellation of public transportation, would again be implemented starting June 16.
 
In a statement on Monday, Dr. Jaime Bernadas, director of the Department of Health (DOH) in Central Visayas, admitted that hospitals in Cebu City were filled beyond capacity due to the rise in the number of patients with symptoms of COVID-19.

He noted that social media posts cited cases of patients who were refused admission in hospitals because they were already full.

“We have investigated these reports and established that these incidents were true,” Bernadas said.

He said private hospitals in Metro Cebu had committed to expand their capacity by an average of 30 percent.

The regional health office will augment the health-care staff to assist the expansion of these hospitals’ capacity, Bernadas said.

He said the hospitals would cater to “severe and critical” COVID-19 patients while those with mild symptoms would be cared for at the city government’s three quarantine facilities, which had a combined total of 338 beds.

DOH sending nurses
In a statement, Cebu Doctors’ Hospital (CDH) said it was grateful for the DOH promise to send interim nurses to add to its current manpower.

CDH also reported that from one pneumonia wing and two isolation centers, it added an entire floor for COVID-19 patients and opened another pneumonia wing which would increase its overall capacity by over 200 percent.  

 

Chong Hua Hospital (CHH) said it was also preparing the resources to enable it to expand its noncritical and critical care capacity.

“Our community is seeing another rise in cases, and should this be left unchecked, we fear that this continued rise would eventually burden our local health-care system even further,” CHH said.

Cebu City Mayor Edgardo Labella said he would appeal Mr. Duterte’s decision and ask that the city be returned to the more relaxed general community quarantine.

Labella attributed the rise in COVID-19 cases to the continued massive testing as well as the backlogs in the DOH reports that were just coming out.

“We are the only local government unit in the country that is conducting massive testing,” he said in an interview with dyLA radio. “For me, the only way to fight this invisible enemy is to continue conducting massive testing, contact tracing and isolation.”

The city has tested at least 25,000 individuals, Labella said.

Hospitals swamped
He said local hospitals were “overwhelmed” by a large number of patients in recent days.

Labella said he had directed that those with mild to moderate cases be taken to quarantine facilities instead.

As of June 15, Cebu City had 1,716 COVID-19 cases, 338 in Mandaue City and 132 in Lapu-Lapu City. The 44 towns and six component cities comprising Cebu province had a total of only 269.

Bernadas said over 30 percent of the COVID-19 cases in the cities of Cebu, Mandaue and Lapu-Lapu had recovered. About 24 percent were hospitalized while more than 40 percent were in quarantine centers or in their homes.  

 

The fatality rate was 1.08 percent, he said.

 

 

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Old55
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Posted

This is unsettling to say the least. 

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jimeve
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5,000 peso fine, that will teach them.

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Mike J
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Posted
21 hours ago, jimeve said:

5,000 peso fine, that will teach them.

Life is often cheap in the Philippines. :sad:

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Old55
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Posted (edited)

My wife and I always had some anxiety about our children during our Cebu visits knowing they were at risk due to the poor health care there.

Edited by Old55
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