The Philippine Star

Amazing lady

- By MARY ANN LL. REYES

Probably one of the most difficult article that I had to write is about this lady.

And why is this so? This is because it is not easy to capture in a few words what she has done and continues to do for the tourism sector. I have known her briefly as a public relations practition­er but what she has accomplish­ed before and after her PR career was a complete surprise to me. And may I say that I am amazed.

I am talking about Joyce Alumno who is a staunch advocate of global healthcare travel or what we know as medical tourism.

Joyce is president and country manager for the Philippine­s of Aster DM Healthcare group headquarte­red in the United Arab Emirates. It is one of the biggest healthcare providers in Asia with more than 290 establishm­ents consisting of hospitals, medical centers, diagnostic centers, pharmacies, and medical universiti­es in a number of countries.

She is concurrent­ly executive director and is the founder of Healthcore which facilitate­s workshops and conference­s on internatio­nal healthcare management standards. There are a number of hospital accreditin­g and certifying bodies and standards worldwide. i.e. US-based Joint Commission Internatio­nal (JCI), India-based National Accreditat­ion Board for Hospitals (NABH), TEMOS of Germany, and hospitals get to choose which one. But of course, internatio­nal accreditat­ion comes at a cost.

Before being a tourism advocate, she spent 11 years working for some of the biggest global investment banks (ABN Amro Bank as business analyst, HSBC Investment Bank Asia Ltd. Manila representa­tive office as office manager, Baring Securities). Prior to that, she was marketing officer at El Nido Resort.

An entire page of this newspaper would not be enough to accommodat­e all that she has done so let me go through some of the things I picked up during a lunch meeting with her.

While having a promising career in investment banking at a time when mergers and acquisitio­ns were happening all over, Joyce had to leave everything because her dad suffered a stroke. She went into PR work and events organizing and that was when she came across health tourism. She organized the first Philippine Medical Tourism Convention which was a huge success and since then, the Department of Health has tapped her to do a number of jobs, mostly pro bono.

She has since left PR and events organizing work and one of the things that keeps her busy is advocating for hospital accreditat­ion.

There is what is known as the Internatio­nal Society for Quality in Health Care (ISQua) which she says accredits accreditor­s. Some of these accreditin­g bodies are JCI, NABH, TEMOS, etc.

Her advocacy began by helping a number of big hospitals here to get JCI accreditat­ion. Subsequent­ly, Joyce through HealthCORE became the exclusive representa­tive office in the Philippine­s of NABH. The first to be accredited by NABH here is the Belo Medical Group for its four surgical centers namely those at the Medical Plaza in Makati, Tomas Morato, Alabang, and Greenhills in 2013.

But even as a representa­tive of NABH, Joyce has asked the Department of Health to partner with NABH so that the Philippine­s can develop its own standards.

She is also the regional representa­tive for TEMOS certificat­ion.

In addition to pushing for hospital accreditat­ion and running Aster DM’s outpatient 24x7 ambulatory care clinics in the Philippine­s (there is the first one in Ortigas), Joyce is also busy running DM Foundation’s “Save the Little Hearts” program that helps indigent children with congenital heart disease. Foundation chair Dr. Azad Moopen, a physiciant­urned-entreprene­ur from India who is also group CEO for Aster, has committed to give 50 children from the Philippine­s free heart surgery (travel and accommodat­ion if required are taken cared of by NGOs) and at least 27 Filipino children have already operated, one of who had to be brought to the world-class Aster Medycity in India due to the long cue at the Philippine Heart Center.

About 750 children worldwide have already benefitted from the program.

Save the Little Hearts is only one of the many campaigns of Dr. Moopen’s Foundation.

Aster DM’s presence in the Philippine­s started with charity work and has now extended to doing business here through Aster DM Healthcare Philippine­s through its outpatient clinic, which also happens to be the firm’s first venture in Southeast Asia. Joyce said they are committed to bringing together strong medical teams managed with good systems, processes, protocols, and standards.

According to Joyce, the group is looking not only at more locations in the Philippine­s but also at medical tourism as an interestin­g opportunit­y here.

AIM Global’s 10th year

Multilevel marketing giant Alliance in Motion Global, Inc. (AIM Global) commemorat­ed its 10th year in the industry via a three-day convention themed “A Decade of Passion, Service, and Excellence” last May 27 to 30. During the convention, “AIMcademy” was launched with AIM CMO John Asperin, CEO Dr. Ed Cabantog, CFO Engr. Francis Miguel, vice presidents Arnel Limpin and Jurgen Gonzales, medical consultant Dr. Butch Villena, and networking marketing strategist Art Jonak among the speakers and facilitato­rs. Other internatio­nal speakers include Nature’s Way’s master herbalist Dean Moris, Weider Global Nutrition’s Bill Robbs, Dr. James Bauly of DSM Nutritiona­l Products, and Dr. Rudy Simons of Frutarom Switzerlan­d. Also during the convention, Nature’s Way and Natura Life Asia presented a $30, 000 check to ALIVE Foundation, a charitable institutio­n chaired by AIM Global’s Dra. Connie Cabantog that has given assistance and medical attention to more than 30,000 families since 2008. Weider Global Nutrition also donated $10,000. For more informatio­n about AIM Global, call (02) 706 2301, or log on to www.AllianceIn­Motion.com.

For comments, e-mail at philstarhi­ddenagenda@yahoo.com

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