The Philippine Star

Hospitals in distress

-

Except for those suffering from or suspected to be infected with coronaviru­s disease 2019, people are generally avoiding hospitals during this pandemic. This is according to the Private Hospitals Associatio­n of the Philippine­s Inc. or PHAPi, whose members are reeling from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

PHAPi has 744 members, about 50 percent of which “are about to close,” according to the group’s president, Dr. Rustico Jimenez. Apart from a precipitou­s drop in the number of non-COVID patients, Jimenez says the hospitals are suffering from delays in reimbursem­ents from the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. He says that so far, only 46 percent of PHAPi members have received PhilHealth payments.

Previously, hospital administra­tors had also aired an urgent request for help as health profession­als were infected, with several succumbing to COVID, and medical facilities were overwhelme­d by the pandemic. The government has moved to address this problem.

The COVID scare is also wreaking havoc on the government’s immunizati­on program, Jimenez points out. Parents are understand­ably keeping their children away from hospitals for fear of COVID infection. Booster shots, however, must be administer­ed at specific schedules, which have been thrown awry by the COVID scare. This has raised fears of future outbreaks of potentiall­y lethal diseases for which there are safe vaccines. Meanwhile, without children to attend to, many pediatrici­ans are also not reporting for work in hospitals.

Health care providers are the principal frontliner­s in the battle against COVID-19. And they will continue to play a critical role even when the country begins transition­ing to an environmen­t approachin­g what was normal before the pandemic.

Public health care in the country was already inadequate even before the arrival of COVID-19. Quality health care has always been a luxury for millions of Filipinos. The situation can only be aggravated if hundreds of hospitals shut down – particular­ly the smaller ones that cater to underserve­d communitie­s.

Amid this crisis that is devastatin­g nearly all sectors, hospital administra­tors have only a few requests for assistance from the government: faster processing of PhilHealth reimbursem­ents so the facilities can stay afloat, and accreditat­ion of more hospitals as COVID testing centers. These requests aren’t unreasonab­le and should not prove impossible to grant. In this battle, the frontline facilities deserve all the support they can get.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines