By Ramon
Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY -- If this looks and sounds more
of an opinion piece than a straight news item, it’s so intended, to catch your
attention and convince you to help the city council lobby for what it pushed
last Monday.
By
unanimous vote and “on motion of all and seconded by all”, the city council,
acting with a deep sense of urgency, adopted a resolution authored by city
councilor Peter Fianza for the setting up of district and regional offices of
the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office in the Cordillera and in
the Autonomous Region in Mindanao to serve thousands of indigent and
seriously ill patients in the two regions.
As councilor Fianza
explained, the PCSO recently decentralized the processing and approval of fund
assistance applications to cash-strapped patients, from its office at the Lung
Center along E. Rodriguez Avenue in Quezon City to the district and regional
offices.
While
the decentralization brings closer PCSO’s services to the people, it serves
better the needs of other regions than those of the people of the Cordillera
and the Autonomous Region in Mindanao.
The
poorest regions in the country notwithstanding their wealth in natural
resource, the Cordillera and the Autonomous Region in Mindanao are the
only two among the 17 regions in the country that do not have a district or
regional office of the PCSO.
Residents
of the two regions now have to go to the nearest regions with district or
regional offices. Patients coming from the Cordillera now have to apply for
medical support at the PCSO Region 1 office in Urdaneta, Pangasinan which
is already swamped by patients coming from the Ilocos.
Curiously,
some regions have more than one district or regional offices. Region 3 has
four, in Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac and Nueva Ecija. So does the Bicol Region,
whose four offices are located in Sorsogon, Albay, Camarines Norte and
Camarines Sur.
For
the Cordillera, Fianza asked that a regional office be established in Baguio and
a district set up in other parts of the region. He noted it would be practical
to have an office in the city as Baguio serves many patients from other parts
of Luzon, it being the top medical center north of Metro-Manila.
A case in point, he
pointed out, is the continuously increasing number of end-stage kidney failure
patients from within and outside the Cordillera being served by the Baguio
General Hospital and Medical Center because of its open policy, the quality of
its service and its lower rates.
As of last January,
the number of kidney patients being treated twice or thrice-a-week at the BGHMC
was 169. By March, the figure increased to 179, a trend which is surely
to continue.
Despite their huge
number, dialysis patients being served by the BGHMC used to avail of PCS0
support three to four times a year when the processing for applications was
still centralized at its office in Quezon City.
At the Urdaneta
office, the quota for kidney patients coming from the BGHMC was initially three
per week. Acting on the clamor of patients, the quota was increased to four a
week. If not increased, BGHMC patients would be able to avail of PCSO support
only once a year.
Fianza’s
resolution will be transmitted to PCSO chair Margarita Juico and the PCSO board
of directors for their appropriate action, with copies furnished President
Aquino and Social Welfare Secretary Corazon Soliman.
Likewise,
the resolution will be transmitted to the regional government of the Autonomous
Region in Mindanao, with the request for it to adopt a similar resolution.
City mayor Mauricio
Domogan also recently wrote PCSO chair Juico to air the plight of patients from
within and outside the Cordillera because of the reduced medical support
from the government’s humanitarian arm as a result of its decentralized
operations.
Readers of this paper
who have connections to top national government agencies or get the
chance to talk to senatorial candidates in the May polls, are urged to ask them
to help lobby for the opening of regional and district offices of the PCSO here
and in the Autonomous Region of Mindanao.
Likewise, local
government units in the Cordillera can follow suit with similar resolutions.
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