By Gabriela Baron
Former Barangay Ginebra San Miguel player Jett Manuel, now an engineer, is helping build emergency quarantine facilities around Mega Manila for hospitals that have reached maximum capacity.
Former Ginebra player Jett Manuel (Photo from Jett Manuel's Instagram @jettmanuel)
Manuel, who played 21 games with the Kings during the 2017-18 season as a 12th pick in the draft, declined a contract extension to focus on their family's logistics company, Megacem, Inc.
Megacem has now partnered with WTA Architecture and Design Studio to build emergency quarantine facilities (EQF).
Emergency Quarantine Facility at Pasig City Children's Hospital (EQF/FACEBOOK)
"In our darkest hours, #WeBuildAsOne as a nation. May this small light shine as we promise to build more light up this darkness in Mega Manila," the engineer-athlete wrote on Instagram.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B-8tH5nB5tC/
EQFs are temporary structures meant to augment and increase the capacity of hospitals. The structures are meant to house persons under investigation (PUIs) to keep them from spreading the infection.
The idea is to be able to build enough facilities to house all PUIs and allow the virus to die out. EQFs will help prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed and allow the country to flatten the curve of the pandemic's growth.
Manuel said that they are pushing to build a total of 62 EQFs in Taguig, Quezon City, Pasay, Rizal Muntinlupa, Batangas Bulacan, Pasig, Makati, Cavite, and Laguna.
As of writing, there are now 22 completed EQFs, including the ones built at Quezon City General Hospital, National Kidney and Transplant Institute, Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, and Pasig City Children's Hospital.
EQFs can consist of 15 hospital beds, external testing box, sanitation and disinfection area, changing room and nurses' lounge.
Former Ginebra player Jett Manuel (Photo from Jett Manuel's Instagram @jettmanuel)
Manuel, who played 21 games with the Kings during the 2017-18 season as a 12th pick in the draft, declined a contract extension to focus on their family's logistics company, Megacem, Inc.
Megacem has now partnered with WTA Architecture and Design Studio to build emergency quarantine facilities (EQF).
Emergency Quarantine Facility at Pasig City Children's Hospital (EQF/FACEBOOK)
"In our darkest hours, #WeBuildAsOne as a nation. May this small light shine as we promise to build more light up this darkness in Mega Manila," the engineer-athlete wrote on Instagram.
https://www.instagram.com/p/B-8tH5nB5tC/
EQFs are temporary structures meant to augment and increase the capacity of hospitals. The structures are meant to house persons under investigation (PUIs) to keep them from spreading the infection.
The idea is to be able to build enough facilities to house all PUIs and allow the virus to die out. EQFs will help prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed and allow the country to flatten the curve of the pandemic's growth.
Manuel said that they are pushing to build a total of 62 EQFs in Taguig, Quezon City, Pasay, Rizal Muntinlupa, Batangas Bulacan, Pasig, Makati, Cavite, and Laguna.
As of writing, there are now 22 completed EQFs, including the ones built at Quezon City General Hospital, National Kidney and Transplant Institute, Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, and Pasig City Children's Hospital.
EQFs can consist of 15 hospital beds, external testing box, sanitation and disinfection area, changing room and nurses' lounge.