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DSWD opens isolation facility for employees with Covid-19

QUEZON CITY -- As part of its continuing initiatives for the health and safety of its employees, the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) converted the Social Welfare and Development Center for Asia and the Pacific (SWADCAP) in Taguig City into an isolation facility for Covid-19 positive employees.

DSWD Secretary Rolando Joselito Bautista led the ribbon cutting on November 4 that marked the opening of the full operation of the facility. It has a full certification from the Department of Health.

The facility provides a safe space for DSWD personnel to recover from the COVID-19 infection and helps alleviate their anxiety and fear of infecting their family members.

Secretary Bautista said that the establishment of the facility is in pursuit of the Department’s goal to care for its frontliners, the angels in red vest, amid the pandemic.

He added that the DSWD has two primordial concerns in the face of the COVID 19 pandemic. These include the provision of assistance to the public who are most in need, as part of the Department’s disaster response, and to ensure the health and safety of the employees who continue to serve the public despite the pandemic.

Department of Social Welfare and Development Secretary Rolando Joselito D. Bautista leads the ribbon cutting ceremony and inspection of the DSWD Isolation Facility for employees who tested positive for COVID-19. Assisting the Secretary are Undersecretary Danilo G. Pamonag and Assistant Secretary Joseline P. Niwane.

In his message during the opening ceremony, the Secretary shared a quote from the author, Sybil Stershic, saying that this best describes the purpose of the establishment of the isolation facility.

“The way your employees feel is the way your clients will feel.  And if your employees don't feel valued, neither will your clients,” the Secretary said quoting the line of Stershic.

At the facility, employees who tested positive will be provided with safe shelter, food, vitamins, health kits, and psychosocial support.  Priority employees are those who are without isolation rooms in their own homes, those who live in dormitories, those who cannot be accommodated by facilities of local government units due to the unavailability of rooms, and those with mild symptoms.

Secretary Bautista went on to say that the previous months tested the resilience of the Department as cases of employees getting infected rose. Thus, the management had to institute stricter health and safety measures, as well as come up with innovative practices to provide utmost care to its employees. (DSWD)

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Kate Shiene Austria

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Information Officer III under the Creative and Production Services Division of the Philippine Information Agency. 

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