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According to OCTA, San Juan had the highest Adar at 79.25 percent,
followed by Pateros at 50.58 percent, Makati at 46.21 percent, and
Mandaluyong at 38.91 percent.
The group said 12 of the capital region’s 17 cities remained at high risk,
while Manila, Navotas, Malabon, and Valenzuela were at moderate risk.
But the municipality of Pateros, despite its Adar, was also classified as
having a moderate risk of COVID-19 exposure.
Other indicators
OCTA said there was an average 4,220 daily new cases in Metro Manila in
the past week, even as it noted a growth rate of -20 percent and a
reproduction number of 0.94.
The growth rate shows how fast cases pile up or decrease, while a
reproduction number below 1 indicates no further transmission.
OCTA said it assessed the overall risk level in Metro Manila-based on the
average levels of Adar, reproduction number, and ICU utilization, and
positivity rates. The group also based its indicators on the risk levels used
in the United States rather than the alert level ratings used by the
Department of Health (DOH).
No update on deaths
For the third day, the DOH had no update on the death toll since the
37,405 reported on Thursday, because of “technical issues” in its COVID
Kaya case collection system which the Department of Information and
Communications Technology is attending to, the department said.
The DOH reported 20,755 new infections, bringing the total to 2,490,858
since the pandemic began last year.
Of the 161,447 active cases, the majority or 81.1 percent were mild; 13.4
percent, asymptomatic; 3.18 percent, moderate; 1.6 percent, severe; and
0.7 percent, critical.
There were 24,391 new recoveries, bringing the total number of survivors
to 2,292,006.
The DOH said 21.9 percent of 74,460 people who were tested on Thursday
were found infected with COVID-19.
Two laboratories did not submit their findings to the department. INQ
Read more: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1493295/metro-manila-still-at-high-risk-for-
covid-19-exposure#ixzz77d67RAZN
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