The Philippine Star

DOH: P3 B allotted for rehab of drug addicts

- With Paolo Romero By JESS DIAZ

The government is spending P3 billion in 2017 to rehabilita­te hundreds of thousands of Filipinos hooked on illegal drugs.

Health Secretary Paulyn Jean Ubial has told the House appropriat­ions committee that the amount allocated for next year is five times this year’s P600 million.

“The huge increase is intended to accommodat­e the increasing number of drug users who are surrenderi­ng to the police,” she said.

Ubial said part of the P3 billion would be used to improve the 13 Department of Health (DOH) drug rehabilita­tion centers throughout the country.

“We will also build four new centers – one in Nueva Ecija, another in Southern Luzon and one each in Mindanao and the Visayas,” she said.

She added that a barangayba­sed drug rehabilita­tion program would also be funded.

Meanwhile, the Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency ( PDEA) is asking Congress to increase its intelligen­ce and operating budget so it could strengthen the campaign against illegal drugs.

The PDEA intends to use the additional budget to hire agents, train more drug-sniffing dogs and purchase more firearms.

PDEA Director Isidro Lapeña told the Senate committee on finance chaired by Sen. Loren Legarda yesterday that the lack of resources prevents the agency from pursuing its mandate.

The agency is seeking the approval of its proposed P1.217 billion budget for 2017.

Under its Operation Private Eye, which taps well-placed tipsters, the PDEA is asking additional funding for its reward to informants.

For the third quarter of this year, the agency has yet to pay the amount of P18 million to 14 informants. Since 2012, it has paid out a total of P62 million to 138 informants. The PDEA is also asking P66.3 million for the purchase for 332 pistols and 226 long firearms.

Lapeña said the current China-made Norinco pistols used by PDEA operatives are prone to malfunctio­ns.

He said the agency plans to hire and train an additional 300 agents at a cost of P60 million as well as 300 more drugsniffi­ng dogs and handlers for P3.7 million next year.

But the largest chunk of the maintenanc­e and other operating expenses of the PDEA’s proposed 2017 budget will be for intelligen­ce gathering at P177 million.

The Philippine National Police has reported that more than 600,000 drug addicts have surrendere­d since the campaign against illegal drugs started when President Duterte assumed office last June 30.

Ubial admitted that the P91billion 2017 budget proposed by Duterte for the DOH “is 26 percent lower than the (P123 billion) appropriat­ed in the 2016 GAA ( General Appropriat­ions Act).”

This is because the P50-billion allocation for the national health insurance program was removed from the DOH and transferre­d to the Philippine Health Insurance Corp., she said.

She also clarified that there are now six Zika virus cases in the country.

“The five cases were reported from 2012 to this year. They were imported, meaning they were detected abroad and confirmed here. The sixth case was confirmed last weekend,” she said.

Camarines Sur Rep. Luis Raymund Villafuert­e warned health authoritie­s against complacenc­y in the global fight against the Zika virus, saying a new internatio­nal study has identified the Philippine­s as among the countries most vulnerable to this disease.

He said the DOH shouldn’t drop its guard after it confirmed the sixth case – a 45-year-old woman from Iloilo who had reportedly tested positive for the Zika virus.

“That there is still zero transmissi­on of the Zika virus in the country should not be a ground for complacenc­y,” he said.

Villafuert­e, who has asked Congress to pass new legislatio­n on maternal and childcare in all barangays, observed that the Zika virus has become a global health emergency that could possibly spark a fresh wave of fetal brain defects, especially in countries like the Philippine­s that do not have excellent health care systems.

He lamented that Ubial has declared that there was no need for the public to be alarmed yet despite the World Health Organizati­on (WHO)’s inclusion of the Philippine­s under Category 2, as there is still no locally transmitte­d Zika virus infection.

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