Baguio Charter anniversary medical mission targets 5,000
>> Monday, August 5, 2013
By Ramon Dacawi
Medical practitioners, civic and other sector volunteers are again priming up to serve an estimated over 5,000 residents availing of a joint medical-dental-optical mission set on August 31 at the Baguio Convention Center to usher in the 104th anniversary of the founding of this, the country’s summer capital.
As in last year’s
edition of this humanitarian feature of the city’s charter day observance, the
main beneficiaries of the mission will be the poorest of the poor,
according to city health officer, Dr. Florence Reyes, and city social welfare
and development officer Betty Fangasan.
“This community effort
is dedicated to those covered by the 4 Ps (Pantawid Pampamilyang Pilipino
Program) of the government for the poverty-stricken families within our local
government unit,” said Dr. John Tinoyan, the mission coordinator.
He said all the local
chapters of Lions International have signed up for volunteer work in the
preparations and actual conduct of the mission, together with all the city’s
health personnel, those involved in emergency medicine such as the
Baguio-Benguet Public Information Civic Action Group, Philhealth and the Red
Cross.
Tinoyan added that
Victory Liner, last year’s main sponsor, has committed P500,000 worth of
medicines.
The local chapters of
Rotary International, last year’s mission backbone with the Lions, begged off
this time to concentrate on their annual medical service outreach in support of
the Baguio Flower Festival in February.
Curative medical
services will be conducted inside the convention center while preventive
services such as maternal and child care and healthy lifestyle will be through
booths being set up around the center.
A special feature this
year will be simultaneous breast-feeding by some 200 lactating mothers,
This is in
keeping with a directive by mayor Mauricio Domogan for health workers to
always accent on the medical fact that no infant formula can approximate
the nourishment and immunity from diseases babies derive from breast milk.
In last year's
mission, 3,000 residents took the queue for medical check- up, 1,000 for tooth
extraction and dental care and another thousand for optical service.
To ease the flow of people availing of the services of the upcoming mission, a medicine distribution area will be set up for those needing maintenance dosage without having to undergo consultation, Tinoyan said.
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