By Ramon Dacawi
Running enthusiasts
will give their physical fitness exercise a humanitarian dimension when they
answer the starting gun simultaneously here in Baguio and in 17 other cities on
Feb. 17 in the four-category inaugural “Philhealth Run 2012” being mounted by
the government health insurance system.
Philhealth
conceptualized the calorie-burning mass run to build up a fund for the
country’s ailing children, to boost their chances of recovering from illnesses
and of growing up like normal kids.
That’s why
registration fees are pegged at P250 for the 3-kilometer fun run, P300 for the
5K, P350 for the 10K and P450 for the 18K that will fire off simultaneously in
Baguio, Dagupan, Tuguegarao, Clark, Malolos, Manila, Laguna, Batangas, Legazpi,
Iloilo, Tacloban, Cebu, Zamboanga, Cagayan de Oro, Davao, Koronadal, Marawi and
Butuan.
That’s why
Philex Mines, one of the country’s major gold and copper producer based in
Tuba, Benguet, came in as the first major sponsor of the Baguio-Cordillera leg
with a P100,000 donation.
“We hope other
companies and institutions would follow suit as the run draws near so,
together, we can reach out to more children in need,”said Maggie del Rosario, public
relations officer of Philhealth-Cordillera based at the SSS Building along
Harrison Rd. here.
Local organizers
are optimistic registration will hit the Cordillera target of 3,000 runners to
help achieve the nation-wide mark of 90,500 participants.
Half of
the nation-wide proceeds will go to the Philippine Children’s Medical Center in
Quezon City as the national beneficiary of the run-for-a-cause.
Half of what
every city/regional leg raises will go to a beneficiary of the regional
organizer’s choice.
Helping Hands of
Healing Hearts Ministries based at Camp 7 here in Baguio has been selected as
the local beneficiary. It is a refuge and recovery home for kids from all
over who are undergoing therapy in various hospitals and medical centers in the
Baguio-Benguet area.
Among those who
stayed in the home established by Claire Henderson, an Irish missionary, was
her namesake, Irish Gullitiw, then a 14-year old daughter of a marginal farmer
from Nueva Vizcaya who recovered from “dermatomyositis with SLE (systemic lupus
erythematosus) features” that had left her unable to walk for months.
Among the home’s
present wards is 14-year old Ana Fontanilla, another farmer’s daughter from
Rosario, La Union who recently received fund support totaling P38,200 to enable
her to sustain her dialysis treatment for two months due to kidney
failure.
She and other
wards of the small facility will be the beneficiaries of funds the Philhealth
Run will raise through sponsorship and registration fees.
Runners’ registration,
which began last Nov. 17, can be either on line (https://run2013.philhealth.gov.ph) or through the form
being issued by the Philhealth regional office at the 4th floor
of the SSS Building along Harrison Rd., Baguio City.
As incentives, top
three finishers in both the male and female divisions will receive cash prizes
of P3,000-P2,000-P1,000 in both the student and adult categories of the 3K,
aside from a P10,000 group prize; P5,000-P3,000-P2,000 in the 5K;
P8,000-P4,000-P3,000 in the 10K; and P10,000-P6,000-P4,000 in the 18K.
The “Nationwide
Run for Mother and Child Protection” will mark Philhealth’s 18th anniversary.
It recalls the spirit
of “Children of Heaven”, the 1997 multi-awarded Iranian film about a boy trying
to win third place in a long-distance race so he could replace his younger
sister’s pink shoes he lost after fetching it from the cobbler.
Third place had
a pair of shoes as prize. Instead, Ali, the boy runner, ends up first in a
bitter race to the finish line after he was tripped by a competitor.
Win or lose,
participants, together with sponsors in the Feb. 17 run will up ailing children
in their struggle for deliverance from all kinds of illnesses. .
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