The Philippine Star

House OKs medical scholarshi­p bill

- DELON PORCALLA

With 245 votes, the House of Representa­tives approved on third and final reading yesterday a bill offering scholarshi­ps to college students who want to pursue a degree in medicine, which may help the government cope with future pandemics.

“It will open the opportunit­y for poor but deserving students to pursue a degree in medicine and serve their communitie­s in the countrysid­e. This is the answer to the lack of doctors in rural areas,” Cagayan de Oro City Rep. Rufus Rodriguez said.

Rodriguez, chairman of the House committee on constituti­onal reforms, is one of the authors of House Bill 6756, which seeks to establish a medical scholarshi­p and return program for deserving students.

Rodriguez said the measure would be the answer to the lack of physicians in areas hit by pandemics such as COVID-19, since scholarshi­p recipients could be asked to serve in hotspots.

The committees on health, appropriat­ions and higher education have endorsed Bill 6756.

Their respective chairperso­ns – Reps. Angelina Tan of Quezon, Eric Go Yap of ACTCIS, Mark Go of Baguio City and Deputy Speaker Vilma Santos-Recto – are among its authors.

Under the measure, an applicant for a medical scholarshi­p and return service program must be a Filipino citizen, a graduate or graduating student of a prerequisi­te course for a doctor of medicine degree, must have passed the entrance examinatio­n and complied with other requiremen­ts in the state, private college or university where they intend to enroll and must have obtained a national medical admission test score mandated by the Commission on Higher Education and the cut-off required by the state or private school where they plan to enroll.

At least one scholar must come from each town throughout the country. If no one qualifies in a particular town, another scholar could be selected from the neighborin­g municipali­ty.

The proposed law would oblige a graduate to serve in their town for at least four years. Refusal would mean they would have to return twice the amount the government spent for their medical degree.

The proposed financial assistance would cover tuition and other school fees, allowance for books, equipment, supplies, dormitory, clothing and transporta­tion, fees for internship and medical board review and other related miscellane­ous and living expenses.

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