The first confirmed COVID-19 case in
Calabarzon is a 62-year-old male, a resident of
Cainta, Rizal, who frequented a Muslim prayer hall in
San Juan,
Metro Manila. The patient was admitted at the Cardinal Santos Medical Center in San Juan, Metro Manila on March 1, 2020, and was diagnosed with severe pneumonia. The case was confirmed on March 5 and the man was referred to the
Research Institute for Tropical Medicine in
Muntinlupa.[2] The individual's case is also the first confirmed local transmission of COVID-19 in the country, having no travel history abroad.[3] The patient's wife also contracted the disease.[4]
Mayor
Kit Nieto of
Cainta ordered the immediate provision of face masks and disinfectants in areas near the residence of the patient. The patient's family, as well as his neighbors, were placed under quarantine.[5] Nieto suspended classes in Cainta from March 7 to 10 and placed the city under community quarantine since March 15.[6][7]
Aside from Rizal, all provinces have confirmed cases. The first case per province by date of confirmation as is as follows:
Laguna and
Quezon – March 15;[10][11] the first two cases in Quezon is from
Lucena, which is geographically part of Quezon but is administered independently from the province. The first Quezon case outside Lucena is linked to the municipality of
Sariaya.[12]
Statistics
Cumulative COVID-19 cases in Calabarzon based on numbers confirmed and validated by the DOH COVID-19 Tracker As of January 3, 2022
On May 16, Calabarzon (except Laguna) was downgraded to general community quarantine (GCQ).[14]
On August 1,
Lipa was placed under a 15-day lockdown and the province of
Batangas was placed under GCQ.[15] On August 4, the modified ECQ status was reinstated for
Cavite,
Laguna, and
Rizal, all of which surround
Metro Manila.[16] On August 19, the aforementioned provinces were downgraded to GCQ.[17][18]
On September 1, the entire region except for Batangas was downgraded to modified GCQ.[19]
On March 22, 2021, in view of the grim rising of new COVID-19 cases, the GCQ status, this time with additional restrictions, was reinstated over Cavite, Laguna, and Rizal.[20]
Alongside Metro Manila and
Bulacan, these areas were collectively given the designation "NCR Plus"[21] and the restrictions placed on the area is described essentially as a GCQ-MECQ hybrid.[22] On March 27, it was announced that "NCR Plus" would be placed under ECQ from March 29 to April 4;[23] it would later be extended up to April 11.[24] On April 12, the area was then downgraded to modified ECQ,[25] while Quezon was elevated to GCQ.[26] On May 15, the provinces under the NCR Plus bubble were downgraded to GCQ with "heightened restrictions."[27] From June 16 to July 15, the city of
Lucena was placed under MECQ.[28] On July 1, Rizal was downgraded to normal GCQ.[29] On July 16, Lucena was downgraded to GCQ with "heightened restrictions," while Cavite was downgraded to normal GCQ.[30] Effective August 1 to 15, Rizal and Cavite would be upgraded back to GCQ with "heightened restrictions," while Laguna was upgraded to MECQ.[31][32]