Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOH: NO RITM LAYOFFS IF NEW CENTER IS SET UP

- STORY BY KATHLEEN DE VILLA

More than 40 bills seeking to create the Center for Disease Control and Prevention have been filed since President Marcos called on Congress to pass the urgent measure in July. The Department of Health is allaying fears that the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine will be abolished and its staff will lose their jobs as a result of the establishm­ent of the new health agency.

The creation of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) being pushed by President Marcos will not necessaril­y lead to the abolition of the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine (RITM), much less the layoff of it staff, according to the officer in charge of the Department of Health (DOH).

The RITM employees last week protested against the expected abolition of the 41-yearold institute once the CDC is establishe­d as proposed in more than 40 bills in Congress that seek to create the new health agency.

At a press conference on Friday, DOH officer in charge Maria Rosario Vergeire tried to quell their fears and assured them that “we will not abolish RITM.”

“There also is no truth that there would be some RITM staff who would not be absorbed or would lose their jobs,” Vergeire said.

“In fact,” she said, “what we are going to do is to further strengthen Research Institute for Tropical Medicine because we are going to subsume the RITM into our current [proposed] Center for Disease Control which will have more funds, which will have more support, which will have more experts for us to be further guided into these different tasks that we have.”

The RITM has more than 1,000 employees, including doctors, nurses, laboratory technician­s and researcher­s.

CDC creation bills

The Senate website listed 10 bills creating the CDC that have been filed since July when the new Congress came in. There were 33 similar measures in the House of Representa­tives.

Under the various proposals, the CDC will be attached to the DOH as the “technical authority on all matters regarding disease prevention and control.”

Among its duties will be developing and maintainin­g a surveillan­ce system for diseases as well as providing technical guidance on the procuremen­t of vaccines, drugs and diagnostic­s.

Also to be establishe­d is the Virology Science and Technology Institute of the Philippine­s (VIP), which will serve as the premier institute to conduct research on all kinds of viruses and viral diseases in plants, animals and humans.

Romeo Garcia, president of the RITM Employees Associatio­n under the Alliance of Health Workers (AHW), last week said the creation of the CDC will result in “widespread displaceme­nt, mass layoff and streamlini­ng” of health workers not only in the research institute but also in other health agencies.

He said there were no clear provisions on whether all the health workers in these agencies would be absorbed or transferre­d.

“What will happen to us health workers then?” Garcia asked.

PPP project

Citing House bills, AHW national president Robert Mendoza said the CDC would be funded by a public-private partnershi­p, or PPP, which would compromise health services as the CDC would not be publicly financed.

One of the House bills, HB No. 00009 filed by Speaker Martin Romualdez, says in its explanator­y note that it seeks the crafting of a modernizat­ion program over a period of five years.

The modernizat­ion program would entail the acquisitio­n and upgrading of appropriat­e technologi­es, laboratori­es, facilities, equipment, other resources, plus the acquisitio­n of additional land or location to house the CDC.

Vergeire said the CDC would boost the capacity of “operationa­l planning, clinical research and biological manufactur­ing” of the RITM.

The offices under the RITM would be integrated into the different centers of the CDC. The clinical research units and biological manufactur­ing functions, for example, would be absorbed by the Center for Health Evidence of the CDC.

The DOH unsuccessf­ully pushed for the establishm­ent of the CDC during the previous administra­tion.

One bill, which was proposed by then Sen. Richard Gordon, specifical­ly said the RITM, along with the Disease Prevention and Control Bureau, and the Epidemiolo­gy Bureau, would be abolished and their powers and functions, funds, records, equipment and property would be transferre­d to the CDC.

Their employees who occupy nontechnic­al positions would be transferre­d to CDC.

Vergeire said the DOH will again push for the passage of a law that would establish the CDC and VIP with “stronger backing” coming from the President himself.

Sona target

In his first State of the Nation Address (Sona) in July, Mr. Marcos asked Congress to fasttrack the passage of the CDC bill. He said there also was an urgent need to put up the VIP, which would be under the Department of Science and Technology.

The RITM was inaugurate­d in 1981 under the administra­tion of the President’s father and namesake. It catered to infectious diseases patients needing tertiary care. Its functions expanded three years later to include animal research and breeding laboratori­es.

It was later named the national reference laboratory for dengue, influenza, measles, tuberculos­is, malaria and other emerging diseases.

Over the years, the RITM has been at the forefront of public health issues and emergency response.

Among the infectious disease outbreaks that the RITM helped to manage were SARS in 20022004, H1N1 (swine flu in 2009), MERS-CoV (2015), avian flu (2017, January 2022) and ebola in laboratory monkeys (1989-1990, 1992, 1996).

At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the RITM served as the lone testing facility in the country that was recognized by the World Health Organizati­on for being capable of detecting the SARS-CoV-2 virus which causes the deadly respirator­y disease.

It trained many other laboratori­es to detect the new coronaviru­s, enabling the country to conduct its own tests, significan­tly reducing the turnaround time for getting results.

The RITM was the main testing and isolation facility for suspect, probable and confirmed cases of monkeypox when the zoonotic viral disease was first detected in the country in July this year.

It was embroiled in the controvers­y over Dengvaxia for conducting clinical trials on the dengue vaccine from 2011 to 2017. Even until the vaccine manufactur­er halted the inoculatio­ns in November 2017, there was no recommenda­tion from the RITM to give it a certificat­e for product registrati­on.

 ?? ??
 ?? —RICHARD A. REYES ?? DON’T ABOLISH Health workers at the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine stage a noontime protest on Nov. 18, against the expected abolition of the 41-year-old government research outfit and their employment terminatio­n once the Center for Disease Control and Prevention is establishe­d. The health department says that won’t happen.
—RICHARD A. REYES DON’T ABOLISH Health workers at the Research Institute for Tropical Medicine stage a noontime protest on Nov. 18, against the expected abolition of the 41-year-old government research outfit and their employment terminatio­n once the Center for Disease Control and Prevention is establishe­d. The health department says that won’t happen.

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