Current PH COVID-19 surge has yet to hit its peak, says OCTA Research

OCTA Research fellow Dr. Guido David warned that the peak of the current coronavirus disease (COVID-19) surge in the Philippines might happen "five weeks from now."
David pointed out that the COVID-19 infection rate in the country has been decreasing but at a slow rate--likely due to the presence of the highly transmissible Delta variant or the higher mobility even with restrictions in place.
" reproduction number in the Philippines is down to 1.32. At the current rate, the number of new cases in the country will hit its peak five weeks from now. But this can happen sooner, especially if new cases in the NCR peak soon," he said in a Twitter post on Saturday, Sept. 4.
"Right now, the entire NCR is a hotspot," he pointed out.
Metro Manila's reproduction number has slightly increased to 1.41 from 1.39 on Saturday.
In a Teleradyo interview on Sunday, Sept. 5, David said that the Philippines might reach around 30,000 daily COVID-19 cases by next week.
"Maaring umabot tayo ng 30,000 sa buong Pilipinas by end of September sa trajectory, pero di namin nakikita ang 43,000 sa Metro Manila alone (We may reach 30,000 across the Philippines by the end of September on the trajectory, but we don’t see 43,000 cases in Metro Manila alone," he said.
"It could happen baka (maybe) today or tomorrow. Nandyan ang possibility, definitely by next week mukhang mahihigitan natin 'yan (There is the possibility, definitely, by next week we will likely be able to surpass the record-high daily tally)," he added.
The Philippines reported its record-high number of cases of 22,366 on Aug. 30.
David said the decision of the government to lift travel restrictions on 10 countries "could affect the numbers."
"But if they impose border restrictions for international travel, hopefully, it will not affect the situation as much as what is already happening in the country," he added.
OCTA has been hoping that the reproduction number will decrease to below 1 to see a reduction in the actual number of daily reported COVID-19 cases.
Reproduction number refers to the average number of secondary infections by each infected individual and is the primary indicator used by OCTA to study COVID trends in the country.