Silliman University donates 150 beds for Dumaguete's isolation facilities
Silliman University (SU) has donated 150 wooden folding beds to the local government of Dumaguete in response to the city's bed shortage in their isolation facility amid the spike in the number of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) cases.

SU President Dr. Betty Cernol McCann said the initiative is one of the university's efforts to help Dumaguete City in its bout against COVID-19.
"Silliman is always ready to help the local government in any capacity it can, as part of our social responsibility to the community," McCann said.
SU has also designated its Davao Cottage and Channon Hall as isolation facilities for those who have mild cases and those with first and second-generation exposures to COVID-19 positive patients.
Dr. Walden Ursos, head of the SU COVID-19 Crisis Management Group, said the move is to help the city decongest its isolation facilities.
"The move eases the demand for bed spaces capacity of the hospital," Ursos added.
Meanwhile, its Vernon Hall is also being utilized as an isolation facility for frontliners from SU Medical Center (SUMC).
On Saturday, June 12, OCTA Research Team reported that the average new COVID-19 cases in Dumaguete rose to 80 percent, with an average of 57 new cases daily.
In May, SUMC is one of the three major hospitals in Dumaguete that reached full capacity in terms of COVID-19 beds, as doctors in Negros Oriental called for the reimposition of enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) in the province.