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Bringing better health care to our people

- Sonny M. angara

AMONG the highlights of President Marcos Jr.’s first State of the Nation address (Sona) was when he said that the government must bring health care to the people and not wait for them to come to the country’s hospitals and health-care centers.

The inaccessib­ility of health care has long been a challenge the country has faced—one that is exacerbate­d by poor health-seeking behavior among Filipinos. An oft-cited study from the Upecon Foundation of the University of the Philippine­s School of Economics (UPSE), which has been reaffirmed in 2015 by the University of the Philippine­s National Institutes of Health (UP-NIH), found that up to six out of 10 Filipinos who succumb to sickness do so without seeing

a medical profession­al. And as other studies have likewise shown, one of the top factors that dissuade citizens from going to the doctor relates to the actual physical distance they would have to travel just to get themselves checked.

All these make the President’s pronouncem­ent a most-welcome developmen­t. He also underscore­d that while many Filipinos have benefited from the Philippine Heart Center (PHC), the Lung Center of the Philipwhic­h pines (LCP), the Philippine Children’s Medical Center (PCMC) and the National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI), it is clear that the services and treatment that these specialty hospitals offer should be available to all throughout the country.

We could not be more heartened by these words, because among the priority measures we filed at the beginning of the current 19th Congress was the Satellite Specialty Hospitals Act (SBN 93). The bill basically mandates existing specialty hospitals—specifical­ly PHC, LCP, PCMC and NKTI—TO establish satellite or affiliated centers in provinces that are geographic­ally isolated, and to manage and operate these centers pursuant to their respective charters. The measure then calls on these specialty hospitals to formulate prioritiza­tion plans so that the satellite specialty hospitals to be establishe­d cater to the top burdens of disease in the region. The avowed goal is that within five years of our proposed law’s enactment, at least one satellite specialty hospital or specialize­d unit within a Department of Health (DOH) hospital is establishe­d in each of the pre-identified regions.

Currently, under a 2021 DOH Department Order, there are 10 facilities that have been designated as national specialty centers, which are hospitals with the highest level of expertise in clinical services, teaching and training, and research; and are among the country’s apex or end-referral facilities for a given medical specialty. Unfortunat­ely, all of these facilities are found within the National Capital Region (NCR), which possibly contribute­s to another longstandi­ng problem of the health-care system—the apparent lack of health-care workers across the country.

In fact, according to a 2019 Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies (PIDS) discussion paper, while national-level statistics may show that there is a sufficient supply

of health-care workers in the Philippine­s when benchmarke­d with internatio­nal metrics, disaggrega­ted data relating to where these health-care workers actually practice show how they are unevenly distribute­d across the country.

The PIDS study estimated that less than 25 percent of cities and municipali­ties have a health human resource (HHR) density that is above the 41 physicians, nurses, and midwives per 10,000 population standard recommende­d by the World Health Organizati­on. This suggests that as much as 75 percent of all cities and municipali­ties do not have a sufficient number of healthcare workers. The discussion paper then explained further that while the number of health-care workers was generally increasing in the past 25 years, these workers were more likely to locate in areas

with greater earning potentials (i.e. highly urbanized cities), and in communitie­s close to where they are trained.

This is where our bill on Satellite Specialty Hospitals dovetails with the Doktor Para Sa Bayan Act (R A 11509), which was enacted earlier this year under the 18th Congress. The measure, which was principall­y authored by former Senate President Tito Sotto, sponsored by then Senate Committee Chairman on Higher Education Joel Villanueva, and co-authored by

14 other senators (including myself), establishe­s a program wherein statesuppo­rted medical scholars will undergo a mandatory return of service at public health institutio­ns, including the satellite specialty hospitals that hopefully will be establishe­d in the coming years.

We are trying to address this issue from another angle—by supporting the creation of hospitals in state universiti­es and colleges (SUCS) that already offer medical degrees. Filed as SBN 92 under the present Congress,

our proposed Health Facility Augmentati­on Act will not only increase the overall hospital bed capacity of our health-care system, it will also provide medical students with the training they require within the SUCS where they are enrolled. Essentiall­y, our measure envisions the establishm­ent of teaching hospitals wherever medical degrees are being offered.

That the applause from the gallery during the SONA was particular­ly energetic when the President spoke about bringing better healthcare

closer to the people speaks volumes of its importance and timeliness. We are confident that through close collaborat­ion across the different branches of government, we inch ever closer to realizing that vision.

Senator Sonny Angara has been in public service for 18 years—9 years as Representa­tive of the Lone District of Aurora, and 9 as Senator. He has authored and sponsored more than 250 laws. He is currently serving his second term in the Senate.

E-mail: sensonnyan­gara@yahoo.com| Facebook, Twitter & Instagram: @sonnyangar­a

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