
Nearly 40,000 more people have recovered from the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), the Department of Health (DOH) reported on Tuesday, Sept. 28.
The DOH said that 39,980 more survivors were added to the country’s COVID-19 recovery tally, causing it to increase to 2,353,140 or 93.3 percent of the country’s case total.
However, another 13,846 people tested positive for COVID-19. This figure brought the total number of cases since the start of the pandemic to 2,522,965, the DOH said.
Of the total case count, 5.2 percent or 132,139 are active cases. Of these patients, 76.6 percent have mild symptoms, 16.4 percent are without symptoms, 0.9 percent are critical, 2.1 percent are severe, and 3.99 percent are moderate cases.
Also, 91 new deaths were logged. The country’s COVID-19 death toll went up to 37,686 or 1.51 percent of the overall confirmed cases.
The death count also includes the 102 fatalities that were earlier announced by the DOH.
Related story: DOH reports 102 more COVID-19 deaths, explains delay in release of figures
DOH Epidemiology Bureau Director Dr. Alethea De Guzman urged the public to help in cutting down the transmission of COVID-19 amid the threat of the more transmisible Delta coronavirus variant.
“Transmission will occur but there are ways to cut that chain of transmission. I think that is what we should focus on,” said De Guzman.
“We can still slow that transmission down, and that is where our minimum public health standards come in so that we can prevent ourselves either from infecting others or us getting infected, and the second is vaccination,” she added.