'Change strategy naman': Sotto urges gov't to rethink COVID-19 strategy
Senate President Vicente Sotto III has urged authorities to rethink their approach in addressing the COVID-19 outbreak, particularly in relying on vaccines to shield the population from the virus.

Sotto believed the government should "change its strategy" in fighting pandemic, especially amid the emergence of new coronavirus variants.
"Vax vax vax! Ok, but what happens after six months? Ano, ulitan? Nabigla diskarte natin (What, we're doing it all over again? We didn't see this coming)," Sotto tweet on Sunday, September 5.
"Change strategy naman por Dios y por Santo!" he appealed.
Vax vax vax! Ok, but what happens after 6 months? Ano, ulitan? Nabigla diskarte natin. Change strategy naman por Dios y por Santo!
— Tito Sotto (@sotto_tito) September 5, 2021
On Monday, September 6, Sotto reiterated that the Interagency Task Force (IATF) on the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases should only look at COVID-19 vaccines as a solution to the pandemic, but also on preventing and treating it through medicines.
He did not oppose the planned shift of Metro Manila from the modified enhanced community quarantine (MECQ) to the more relaxed general community quarantine (GCQ), but said the IATF must "concentrate on treatment and prevention through medicines instead of believing the vaccine manufacturers only."
The national government aims to vaccinate over 70 miliion Filipinos by the end of 2021 to achieve herd immunity against the virus.
But due to the spread of the Delta variant, authorities are negotiating with vaccine makers for booster shots. The executive department proposed a P45-billion allocation under the 2022 budget for its purchase.
Sotto has been echoing calls from a doctors' group for the adoption of a national protocol for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19 as an alternative to the imposition of community quarantines.
In an online interview last March, he said the country would have already contained the disease had authorities concentrated on the treatment and cure of the disease since last year.
Sotto has also supported the use of ivermectin against COVID-19, admitting last April that he himself is taking the drug to supposedly protect himself from the disease.