The Philippine Star

Marcos launches lung transplant program

- By HELEN FLORES

President Marcos launched yesterday the country’s lung transplant program, aimed at saving the lives of individual­s suffering from irreversib­le lung diseases.

In his speech, Marcos said the partnershi­p between the Lung Center of the Philippine­s (LCP) and National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI) – two specialty hospitals built during the term of his late father and namesake – could be a template by which hospitals pool their resources and share assets to boost patient care.

“The launch of the LCP and the NKTI lung transplant program is an applicatio­n of the proven maxim that two heads – two hospitals – are better than one,” Marcos said.

The LCP and the NKTI were establishe­d in 1981 through Presidenti­al Decree 1823 to address the respirator­y health problems in the Philippine­s and to help the Filipino people afflicted with kidney and allied diseases, respective­ly.

A fire in 1998 destroyed 80 percent of the LCP, leading to a temporary halt in the program as efforts were redirected towards reconstruc­ting the facility.

As part of the program, the LCP has been improving its infrastruc­ture capacity, which includes the renovation of its post-anesthesia care unit worth P4.2 million and surgical intensive care unit amounting to P1.8 million, which will be funded through the 2024 General Appropriat­ions Act and private sector donations.

Marcos vowed to exert all efforts to rehabilita­te the NKTI Annex building damaged during the fire that hit LCP in 1998.

“We will be coming to you again so that we can complete the rebuilding, I was a little sad to hear that the damage that was caused by the fire of 1998 has not yet been completely rehabilita­ted, and I think that’s the first thing that we have to look to,” the President said.

Marcos also underscore­d the importance of the two institutio­ns, noting that pneumonia and other forms of respirator­y diseases were among the top 20 causes of mortality among Filipinos from January to July 2023 while acute lower respirator­y tract infection and tuberculos­is also remain among the top causes of illness in the country.

The President also cited his experience going to the doctor when he first contracted COVID-19, a respirator­y illness, in 2020. The President also caught COVID in 2022 and 2023.

Marcos said while the pandemic is over, the diseases that prompted the establishm­ent of the LCP still remain, and in increasing numbers.

Joining the President at the launch were Sen. Sonny Angara and Quezon City Mayor Joy Belmonte.

Belmonte committed to assist in establishi­ng a registry of lung donors in the city.

 ?? ?? President Marcos leads a ribbon-cutting ceremony launching the country’s lung transplant program at the Lung Center of the Philippine­s yesterday. With him are Batanes Rep. Ciriaco Gato Jr., Sen. Sonny Angara, Quezon City Mayor Joy Belmonte and officials of the LCP and the National Kidney and Transplant Institute.
President Marcos leads a ribbon-cutting ceremony launching the country’s lung transplant program at the Lung Center of the Philippine­s yesterday. With him are Batanes Rep. Ciriaco Gato Jr., Sen. Sonny Angara, Quezon City Mayor Joy Belmonte and officials of the LCP and the National Kidney and Transplant Institute.

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