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COA flags P152-M idle freezers for vaccines
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COA flags P152-M idle freezers for vaccines

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  • Gross waste: Some P152-M worth of ultra-low temperature freezers procured by the government for COVID-19 vaccinations are in danger of going to waste, rendered “idle or unutilized,” warns COA.
  • 243 freezers were in “good condition” as of July 2024.
  • COA recommends that the DOH collaborate with other hospitals and local government units to repurpose the freezers for keeping cancer medicines, clinical specimens, microorganisms and other “sensitive” biological products for research.

With the country entering a “postpandemic phase,” the Commission on Audit (COA) has warned that P152 million worth of ultra-low-temperature freezers procured by the government for its COVID-19 vaccination program were in danger of going to waste.

Based on the special audit it conducted from May 2023 to January 2024 on the national vaccination drive vs COVID-19, the COA noted that a number of ultra-low-temperature freezers remain “idle or unutilized” while these could be repurposed for keeping cancer medicines, clinical specimens, microorganisms and other “sensitive” biological products for research.

“This nonrefocusing or nonrepurposing of these valuable assets, with an estimated total value of P152,118,000, hinders their potential to contribute to other critical health-care needs,” read the COA audit findings released in December 2024.

Majority bought

“Failure to properly repurpose these freezers could also result in failing to maximize the government funds spent and the value of donations on the said equipment,” it noted, adding that the freezers could last up to 10 years.

Of the 243 freezers in “good condition” as of July 2024, 166 were purchased by the government. The rest came from donors.

The equipment was used to store specific COVID-19 vaccines, especially the Pfizer-BioNTech brand that needed to be kept and transported at temperatures ranging from minus 90 degrees Celsius to minus 60 C. The government bought these freezers to comply with the operational guidance for an ultra-cold-chain system set by the World Health Organization and United Nations Children’s Fund.

The same guidelines, however, urged countries to come up with a transition and maintenance plan on how the freezers could be used beyond the COVID-19 vaccination program.

The COA cited the disease prevention and control bureau of the Department of Health (DOH), which stated that the procured freezers were “versatile units [that] can serve as essential equipment for local health systems in clinical and research applications.”

Among the bureau’s suggestions were to transfer the equipment to government-run research facilities such as the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine, San Lazaro Hospital and national warehouses or regional hubs to “allow rapid deployment of ultra-low-temperature vaccines … in case of future needs.”

Collaboration urged

The COA recommended that the DOH collaborate with other hospitals and local government units to ensure that any efforts to repurpose the freezers were “aligned with the needs of the health-care system.”

See Also

A separate COA audit report covering the year 2023 showed that more than P11 billion worth of drugs, medicine and supplies, including 7 million vials of COVID-19 jabs, expired that same year.

The DOH responded by defending the procurement of millions of doses of COVID-19 vaccines that eventually went to waste, saying it was done to save lives during a global emergency.

“The COVID-19 vaccination exercise did not have the benefit of years of planning and preparation like other routine and established vaccination programs. It was an emergency, a matter of life and death,” it said in a statement.

Latest DOH data showed that more than 177 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines, including booster shots, have been administered nationwide since the government’s inoculation program was launched in 2021.


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