PH logs 6,833 new COVID-19 cases; active infections now over 61K

The Department of Health (DOH) reported 6,833 new cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) on Friday, June 18.
Active cases in the country stood at 61,776. This is 4.6 percent of the country’s running tally of confirmed cases currently at 1,346,276.
Of the active infections, 92.2 percent were mild, 3.7 percent were asymptomatic, 1.7 percent were severe, 1.2 percent were in critical condition, while 1.22 percent were moderate cases.
The tallies on recoveries and deaths also rose to 1,261,115 and 23,385, respectively. This after the DOH announced 3,441 new survivors and 110 new fatalities.
In a radio interview on Friday, Health Undersecretary Leopoldo Vega said that the healthcare utilization rate (HCUR) in the National Capital Region remains at “low-risk.” Meanwhile, he flagged the Bicol region as its HCUR is at the critical level due to the rising number of cases.
The OCTA research group also sounded the alarm in Davao City as it recorded its highest number of COVID-19 cases in a single day which was at 482 on Thursday, June 17.
Related story: OCTA Research: Davao City logs highest single-day COVID-19 cases since pandemic began
“Patuloy ang panawagan sa ating local government units na lalo pa nating paigtingin ang ating minimum public health standards, ang ating pagpapatupad ng prevent, detect, isolate, test, and reintegrate strategy upang patuloy pa ring bumaba ang ating mga kaso (We continue to call on our local government units to further tighten the implementation of our minimum public health standards, our implementation of the prevent, detect, isolate, test, and reintegrate (PDITR) strategy so that our cases continue to drop),” said DOH Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire in an online forum on Friday.
“Panawagan din po namin sa ating kababayan, hindi lang po bakuna ang solusyon dito sa ating kinakaharap na sitwasyon. Kailangan ipatupad pa rin itong minimum public health standards (We also call on our countrymen that vaccines are not the only solution to the situation we are facing currently. These minimum public health standards still need to be implemented),” she added.