Manila Standard

Lawmakers propose solutions to medical act impasse

- By Rio N. Araja

TWO ranking members of the House of Representa­tives have proposed solutions to the impasse on proposed legislatio­n to replace the Medical Act of 1959.

Bohol Rep. Alexie Tutor, the committee on civil service and profession­al regulation chairperso­n, is asking countrysid­e doctors in the district and provincial hospitals, the so-called Doctors to the Barrios, and the Commission on Higher Education for help on a negotiated consensus solution to the impasse hindering the replacemen­t of the old Medical Act of 1959.

Senior Citizen party-list Rep. Rodolfo Ordanes, a member of the Tutorled

panel and special committee on senior citizens chairperso­n, said “on this matter of recognitio­n of a national associatio­n of doctors, I am inclined to think that the model we should be looking at is the Coordinati­ng Council of Private Educationa­l Associatio­ns (COCOPEA), where a diverse range of different types of schools are under the COCOPEA.”

He is also a committee on higher and technical education and committee on health member.

“Right now, the Philippine Medical Associatio­n is not like the COCOPEA because not all physicians are covered by the PMA. The proposed Integrated National Organizati­on of Physicians is, I believe, the COCOPEA-like umbrella organizati­on that would indeed be inclusive.

Automatica­lly making all PRC physician board passers members of the PMA is not the solution for inclusivit­y because that would be violative of the constituti­onal right of freedom of associatio­n,” he said.

“A real umbrella organizati­on would include all the physicians who see patients, including those in remote areas and provinces with only a basic PRC physician license and who are not PMA members,” he added.

“The current impasse on the proposed new profession­al regulation law for doctors will be resolved in the coming weeks before Congress resumes session after the summer break,” Tutor cited.

 ?? Danny Pata ?? SIEGE OF LIPA. Members of the Republica Filipina Reenactmen­t Group reenact Katipunero­s using a Spanish bronze cannon during the siege of Lipa in Batangas in Intramuros on Sunday. The siege in June 1898 ended when Katipunan General Eleuterio Marasigan brought in a cannon from Cavite and began bombarding the compound where the Spaniards were hiding.
Danny Pata SIEGE OF LIPA. Members of the Republica Filipina Reenactmen­t Group reenact Katipunero­s using a Spanish bronze cannon during the siege of Lipa in Batangas in Intramuros on Sunday. The siege in June 1898 ended when Katipunan General Eleuterio Marasigan brought in a cannon from Cavite and began bombarding the compound where the Spaniards were hiding.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines