Vaccination not a guarantee of immunity from 'toxic' COVID, Duterte admits
Getting vaccinated is still not a guarantee a person will not get infected with the coronavirus disease, President Duterte said Monday.

The President explained the vaccination will just provide a layer of protection so he encouraged vaccine recipients to continue to observe health measures.
Mask wearing and physical distancing, he insisted, are among the health and safety protocols that must still be observed despite receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.
"Itong COVID na ito is a very toxic thing and it can contaminate you again. There is no guarantee --- though it would give you a measure of protection, it does not guarantee that you will not get COVID again," Duterte said during a televised address Monday, June 7.
"So despite or in spite of your vaccines and boosters, please observe the basic protocol: mask, hugas ng kamay at social distancing (Wear a mask, wash hands, and observe social distancing)," he added.
READ: Duterte to vaccinated Filipinos: Observe health protocols
The President made the appeal after reminding the public to complete their two-dose vaccination against the coronavirus amid reports some have missed the second dose.
He said vaccine recipients should get the second COVID jab "because your protection is not complete without the booster." Local authorities have been directed by the President to track down the people who missed their second shot to issue the reminder.
The President, in the same speech, conceded that there will be no end in sight to the coronavirus pandemic if people would defy health protocols, including restrictions to mass gatherings. He said the government was ready to calibrate measures should the quarantine violations would continue and cause the surge in infections.
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"Matatapos rin ito, especially with your cooperation, matatapos ito mas madali (This will end especially with your cooperation. It will end faster)," Duterte said.
The country has seen a continued surge in coronavirus cases, especially in parts of Mindanao, in recent weeks. As of June 7, the country has recorded more than 1.2 million cases of infections, including more than 21,000 deaths.
On the government's free inoculation campaign, around 1.54 million people have so far been fully vaccinated as of June 6, representing 2.2 percent of 70 million population targeted for herd immunity.