2 PhilHealth officials take leave of absence, cite medical reasons
According to medical certificate of retired general Ricardo Morales, president and chief executive officer, he is undergoing chemotherapy for lymphoma and is immunocompromised
Arnel de Jesus, senior vice president and chief operating officer, writes to Senate president saying he will make himself available for inquiry on corruption when his health permits
TWO top executive officers of Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) have taken a leave of absence amid the investigations into the alleged irregularities in the state-owned firm.
Retired general Ricardo Morales, president and chief executive officer, and Arnel de Jesus, senior vice president and chief operating officer, informed the Senate about their medical conditions.
The Senate committee of the whole received a medical certificate stating that Morales is undergoing chemotherapy for lymphoma and he is immunocompromised.
“This is to certify that General Ricardo C. Morales, 67-yearold male, is a diagnosed case of Diffuse Large B cell Lymphoma, and is currently undergoing chemotherapy at Cardinal Santos Medical Center,” the certification signed by Morales’ attending physician read.
It added that Morales was advised to complete six cycles of treatment and he is therefore “immunocompromised and vulnerable to opportunistic infections.”
“It is therefore in his best interest that I have advised him to take a leave of absence. He shall undergo a repeat PET CT scan after completing six cycles of chemotherapy. After which I shall make a recommendation when he can resume to work,” the certification stated.
De Jesus, for his part, wrote to Senate President Vicente Sotto III, saying he will not be able to attend the Senate hearing scheduled for Tuesday, Aug. 11.
“I deeply regret to inform you that I will not be able to attend the Senate hearing to discuss and tackle resolutions on the alleged rampant corruption, incompetence and inefficiency in PhilHealth,” he said.
He assured that he will make himself available when his health permits.
“I respectfully ask that my privacy be respected during this time,” he said.
Morales, in a statement issued on Aug. 5, denied the allegation of former anti-fraud legal officer Thorrsson Montes Keith that he and other top executive officers of PhilHealth have pocketed around P15 billion from the state-owned insurance firm’s coffers.
“His malicious claims not substantiated by evidence were obviously made to malign officers that rejected his ambitions for higher offices which he is not qualified for,” Morales said.