PGH transforms rooms into 'ICU-setting' amid 'steady increase' in COVID admission
By Noreen Jazul
The Philippine General Hospital (PGH) has converted some of its wards into an “ICU (Intensive Care Unit) setting” amid the steady increase of COVID-19 patients being admitted at the hospital.

PGH spokesperson Jonas del Rosario said the hospital’s ICU has been full for the past seven to 10 days.
Sinc “many of PGH’s patients are severely or critically ill, Del Rosario said the hospital had to “re-create” other rooms to make them “like ICU-ready.”
“Our patients will require either a ventilator or high flow oxygen,” Del Rosario told CNN Philippines.
Aside from transforming rooms, Del Rosario said PGH also reopened another ward to accommodate more patients, increasing the hospital’s COVID bed capacity from 200 to 230.
Currently, PGH has 177 COVID patients already admitted with a few waiting in the Emergency Room, according to Del Rosario.
Asked if he agrees with OCTA Research Group’s prediction that ICUs in all Metro Manila hospitals might be completely occupied by April, Del Rosario said: “I think that is very possible.”
“Depending on the allocation of a hospital in terms of ICU, I think that’s very possible. A lot of ICUs will be full,” he said.
“I know a lot of the major medical centers, the private ones, are already filled because we’re seeing some of the patients trying to get into PGH,” he added.