The Philippine Star

‘One inmate dies each day in NBP’

- By RALPH EDWIN VILLANUEVA

An average of one inmate in the New Bilibid Prison dies every day, according to the NBP’s hospital chief.

“(It) is in critical conpriorit­y dition… It is more than the universall­y accepted computatio­n,” Henry Fabro told reporters on the sidelines of the Asian and Pacific Conference on Prison Health in Makati City yesterday.

Fabro said the worldwide standard is at 0.2 percent of the population.

Inside Bilibid, the figure is at 0.5 percent, which is equivalent to one inmate dying every day.

He said this may be mainly attributed to the prison system’s poorly equipped hospital and an astonishin­gly low number of medical profession­als. There are only 13 physicians attending to more than 47,000 prisoners, across seven penal colonies of the Bureau of Correction­s (BuCor).

“The basic problem… I think would be the hospital, it is poorly equipped. That is why we are asking help from other agencies,” Fabro said.

“Imagine, we only have four doctors who are going around four shifts. In fact, we are going to talk to Secretary of Health (Francisco) Duque to ask for doctors… Maybe, they could give us some,” he added.

Despite this, Fabro said there is no unusual increase in deaths.

Earlier, inmate deaths had been recorded inside the NBP.

Some groups pointed at the demolition of illegal shanties inside the prison’s maximum security compound as a reason as well as dehydratio­n. Both were denied by the BuCor. Fabro also said they are trying to erase the issue of “hospital-pass-for-sale” scheme from the minds of inmates.

He added that the BuCor has started to increase the outpatient consultati­ons to 80 per day, from 10 to 20 per day implemente­d previously.

For jails of the Bureau of Jail Management and Penology nationwide, the mortality rate stands at 300 to 800 per year starting 2015, according to BJMP medical officer Paul Borlongan.

“Compared (with the) internatio­nal standard, it is not that far off. I am not saying it is acceptable… but we cannot deny that some are dying,” Borlongan said.

He added that the congestion of jails affects the health of the inmates, but the facilities are being improved “little by little.”

There are only 12 medical practition­ers and two psychiatri­sts inside BJMP facilities, according to Borlongan.

The BJMP, he said, currently has some 1,200 medical staff in 478 facilities across the country.

The bureau, he added, is making sure that each jail should have at least one nurse on duty.

“(Our) biggest challenge is addressing the health perspectiv­e, we want to maintain how to provide health services to (persons deprived of liberty) or to the inmates, equal or equitable like the community,” Borlongan said.

Call for probe

In a related developmen­t, the BuCor welcomed the resolution filed by Sen. Leila de Lima calling for a probe on the supposed deaths of 29 inmates at the NBP.

The detained senator filed Senate Resolution 208, urging a thorough investigat­ion on the deaths of the inmates within a 17-day period last October.

The deaths, according to De Lima, were “due to lack of basic necessitie­s and proper medical treatment.”

In an ambush interview with reporters yesterday, BuCor chief Director General Gerald Bantag lauded the senator ’s effort.

“What the senator filed is (a) good (move), so we can know the truth,” Bantag said.

He added he wants to open the BuCor as much as possible to show they are not hiding anything.

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