Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOH hopeful on SC birth control ruling

- —STORY BY TIN AG. SANTOS AND PENN IE AZ AR CON DELACRUZ

Health officials are optimistic that the Supreme Court will lift its temporary restrainin­g order on the distributi­on of contracept­ives and pregnancy-control devices in effect for nearly two years now. “We are confident that the Supreme Court will respect the rights of Filipino women,” said the Department of Health spokespers­on.

(Last of two parts)

Two years into the Supreme Court’s temporary restrainin­g order (TRO) on the distributi­on of contracept­ives and pregnancy-control devices, the Department of Health (DOH) continues to keep faith with the justices’ “respect for the rights of women.”

“We’re positive that the [Supreme Court] will issue a decision in our favor,” said Dr. Eric Tayag, spokespers­on for the DOH.

“[But] it’s up to them when to decide. We cannot force them, but we know that they are studying the matter thoroughly. We are confident that the Supreme Court will respect the rights of Filipino women,” Tayag said, referring to the TRO that also restrains the Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) from granting any and all pending applicatio­ns for the registrati­on or recertific­ation of contracept­ives.

With the country’s supply of contracept­ives reduced by the 2015 TRO, women have switched from pills and implants—among those covered by the court ruling—to cheaper and more readily available alternativ­es like condoms. Some are even considerin­g more permanent options like vasectomy and tubal ligation.

Civil society organizati­ons (CSOs), women’s groups and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons (NGOs) have joined their voices to the clamor for the lifting of the TRO, which the Supreme Court imposed on contracept­ives after a probirth group had claimed that these induced abortion.

Online petition

Aside from Purple Ribbon Movement for Reproducti­ve Health, which started an online petition to urge the Supreme Court to lift the TRO, CSOs like Likhaan Center for Women’s Health have assumed part of the government’s responsibi­lity for the reproducti­ve rights of its citizens.

The group provides direct health care services to women in marginaliz­ed communitie­s, said one of the group’s founder and director, Dr. Junice Demeterio Melgar.

As the CSOs’ representa­tive in the National Implementa­tion Team of the country’s Reproducti­ve Health law, Likhaan supports the DOH and its allied agencies like the FDA, PhilHealth and Commission on Population (Popcom) in its policies on family planning, Melgar said.

“Likhaan has tried to respond to this looming contracept­ive crisis by educating women in poor communitie­s, providing family planning services, and supporting government agencies in their actions to lift the TRO,” she said.

Despite the TRO, Likhaan continues to provide contracept­ives in poor areas like Malabon, Port Area in Manila, Pasay, Bulacan, Quezon City, and Eastern Samar, where its staff also do organizing work.

“Luckily for us at this time, the contracept­ives that poor women use still have viable registrati­ons and we are able to access supplies from the DOH and the UN Population Agency and mobilize the supplies to remote areas where the demand is high. So the contracept­ives are used before their registrati­on expires,” Melgar said.

The groups’ proactive stance on the issue was a response to the TRO, which, according to Melgar, “is terribly inconsider­ate of women’s specific needs and downright discrimina­tory. It is a gross violation of women’s human rights by the Supreme Court, which makes seeking accountabi­lity extremely difficult.”

Optimistic

Health Secretary Paulyn Ubial, who remained optimistic that the Supreme Court would eventually heed the DOH appeal to lift the TRO, said the department continued to coordinate closely with its partner NGOs.

“The TRO was [directed] at the DOH so the private sector, the NGOs, can still provide these contracept­ives,” Ubial said, adding that the DOH continues to distribute supplies not covered by the Supreme Court order.

Even with the TRO still in effect, there are other contracept­ive products and services accessible and available to women, she said, including injectable­s, pills, condoms, IUDs, sterilizat­ion and vasectomy for men, and tubal ligation for women.

“If eventually the [Supreme Court] decides not to lift the TRO, we’d be left with condoms and sterilizat­ion,” Ubial said.

She said the DOH hoped a decision would be reached soon, as the hormonal contracept­ives Implanon and Implanon NXT in their storage would expire in 2018.

As a last resort, should the TRO stay, the supplies could be donated to another country before their expiration date, she said.

“What we’re trying to negotiate right now is for the Philippine­s to donate these commoditie­s to other countries that can use them instead of wasting P300 million worth of subdermal implants,” Ubial said.

Out of stock

There are still adequate supplies of public commoditie­s, but the more expensive brands of pills, including those used for PCOs (polycystic ovary syndrome), have gone out of stock, Melgar said.

“Yet it is not easy to counsel women with PCOS to shift brands because brands have different contents and effects on people,” she said.

“It is ironic that the crisis in FDA registrati­on is affecting affluent women more, meaning those who need the pills not for contracept­ion but to treat an ovarian problem that is preventing them from getting pregnant. Perhaps the Supreme Court justices would be moved to act if the capacity to get pregnant by rich women was most affected?” Melgar said.

For Tayag, the more pressing issue is not the availabili­ty of contracept­ives, which are produced regularly, but their registrati­on.

“Even if, let’s say, there are donated contracept­ives, they cannot be used unless they are registered,” he said.

“The issue is not about running out of supply. The issue is before you can use them, there has to be certificat­ion, registrati­on with the FDA,” he added.

According to Tayag, the DOH is currently conducting an inventory of contracept­ives, particular­ly the implants that can no longer be used because of the TRO.

“Except for the implants, we have already distribute­d the other contracept­ives to the health centers. Anyway, these are not covered by the TRO,” Tayag said.

Worst case scenario

According to Executive Order (EO) No. 12, signed in January by President Duterte and which calls for the full implementa­tion of the Reproducti­ve Health Law, some 6 million Filipino women have unmet needs for modern family planning methods.

Of this number, a third—or 2 million—have been identified as poor women who should be given access to contracept­ives by 2018 and thereafter, according to the EO.

The TRO, however, contradict­s the executive order’s avowed goal.

Tayag said the DOH was also preparing for the worst case scenario should the TRO stay: an increase in population that could endanger the health of women, and possibly increase the number of maternal deaths and of abortion.

With contracept­ive supplies thinning out, the country’s population could balloon to 106 million this year, Popcom Executive Director Juan Antonio Perez III said in an earlier interview.

Tayag said the DOH would soon release a list of contracept­ives affected by the TRO and the expiration dates of their certificat­es of product registrati­on for reference.

Ubial said the DOH submitted a motion for reconsider­ation to the Supreme Court last year, and made a follow-up in March.

“But we have yet to receive a reply,” she said.

 ??  ??
 ?? —JOAN BONDOC ?? Womenwait for consultati­on at Likhaan Center for Women’s Health.
—JOAN BONDOC Womenwait for consultati­on at Likhaan Center for Women’s Health.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines