Philippine Daily Inquirer

OWNERSHIP OF COOP HOSPITALS OPEN TO ALL

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Iam Jose M. Tiongco. I graduated from the UP College of Medicine and later took surgical training at the Philippine General Hospital Department of Surgery. Shortly after, I left for Vienna, Austria, to train in the Department of Neurosurge­ry, University of Vienna. Upon my return to the Philippine­s, I worked as the chair of the Department of Surgery of Davao Medical Center (now Southern Philippine­s Medical Center), the biggest—and the best!—hospital in the country, now being run by Dr. Leopoldo Vega who also trained under my department in mytime.

I write this in reaction to Ramon Tulfo’s column which noted that Health Secretary Paulyn Jean Rosell Ubial is a secret owner of the first Filipino hospital in Qatar (“Ubial’s confirmati­on in limbo,” Metro, 5/23/17).

First, a background­er: Twenty-five years ago, as a response to the fragmented and grossly unequal distributi­on of health care delivery (by both government and private institutio­ns) in the country, I helped found the Medical Mission Group Hospitals and Health Services Cooperativ­e ( MMGHHSC). We establishe­d the first-ever MMGHHSC hospitals in the country in Davao City and Tagum City, Davao del Norte. These were, at first, owned not only by the doctors and health profession­als but also by all the workers of the hospitals, including utility—as all cooperativ­es should be. We later extended the ownership of these hospitals to everyone in the community—like the patients and their families.

As the idea of a communityo­wned hospital caught fire and spread all over the Philippine­s, we establishe­d MMGHHSC Philippine­s Federation, now composed of 22 hospitals and health services primary cooperativ­es in Luzon, the Visayas, and Mindanao. Sadly, the first hospital cooperativ­e we set up in Davao City is not at present a member of good standing. But that is another story.

In the 25 years of our existence as cooperativ­es, we never gave up on the idea of establishi­ng similar cooperativ­es all over the world, especially in areas hosting a substantia­l number of overseas Filipino workers.

It was in Qatar where we were finally able to make a breakthrou­gh. As we write, we have 14 MMGHHSC chapters in Doha, Qatar, and we are in the process of organizing even more, looking at a potential membership of 300,000 Filipinos. We are now also in the process of organizing the MMGHHSC in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, getting very enthusiast­ic responses from some of the 900,000 overseas Filipinos there. We envision the cooperativ­e way as the best way not only to serve the health needs of OFWs but also to establish them as a significan­t economic presence in their host countries.

I must confess this is quite a novel idea, something the Cooperativ­e Developmen­t Authority is still coming to grips with, as evidenced by the sevenmonth delay in the registrati­on of the first MMGHHSC chapter consisting of members residing outside the country.

But it was the Department of Health, headed by Secretary Ubial, that immediatel­y took up the idea of serving our countrymen’s health needs abroad. She first heard of our plans in December 2016 when I asked her to help us obtain an equivalenc­y agreement with the State of Qatar so our specialist doctors could practice their specialtie­s in Filipino hospitals there. By January 2017, she had already personally conferred with her counterpar­t in Qatar, the minister of public health. By February 2017, the equivalenc­y agreement was approved.

Last April 2017 she was in Doha, Qatar with the presidenti­al entourage and was kind enough to spend some time with the newly formed MMGHHSC Internatio­nal, discussing our plans for the establishm­ent of Filipino cooperativ­e hospitals all over the Arabian Peninsula.

For Tulfo’s informatio­n, Dr. Ubial is not yet a member of our cooperativ­e. But we hope she will be. And we hope, as well, that Tulfo himself will be.

The ownership of a cooperativ­e, especially a Filipino cooperativ­e, is never a secret. It should be open to everybody—as MMGHHSC hospitals’ is. DR. JOSE M. TIONGCO, chief executive officer, MMGHHSC

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