By Pamela Mariz
Geminiano
BAGUIO CITY -- The Department of Health in Cordillera is
happy about the large number of health bills passed during the first two years
of President Rodrigo Duterte.
Dr. Amelita Pangilinan, Assistant
Regional Director of DOH in the Cordillera Administrative Region, expressed
this in an interview on Tuesday.
“Actually, it's not only in the
President’s SONA. It was during his time when many of the Republic Acts (RA),
health bills were passed into law,” Pangilinan noted on the sidelines of the
Philippine National Health Research System press conference here on Tuesday.
The local health official cited,
for instance, the Executive Order on anti-smoking, the lifting of the Temporary
Restraining Order (TRO) on Reproductive Health (RH), the implementation of the
Philippine Health Insurance Corporation’s (PHIC) Z-package, the ban on
fireworks and pyrotechnics, the Mental Health Law, and the Universal Health
Insurance.
“Ako, personally, I look at it as
ang term na ito ang tuwang tuwa ako kasi ang daming naisabatas na bill and we
are actually reaping the fruits of many years na pagla-lobby. Yung smoking na
nga lang pati yung RPRH (Personally, I am happy because it is during this term,
when there are many laws passed and we are reaping the fruits of many years of
lobbying, let alone the smoking law and the Reproductive Health),” Pangilinan
said.
Prior to the lifting of the TRO
on RH, Pangilinan said local health officials were worried. But with the
lifting of the TRO, which she said was the result of lobbying, aside the
President’s expressed desire for its implementation, the DOH-CAR was able to
implement its reproductive health programs.
She also noted the ban on fireworks and pyrotechnics that had
led to a big drop in the number of cases of people getting injured or killed
during the Christmas season.
“Talagang sa isang EO lang niya,
wala na (Its just one EO from him [President Duterte] and it's gone),” she
said.
Pangilinan added that Duterte's
landmark Mental Health Law now provides services down to the barangay level.
“Kasi ang psychiatrist, they are
only in the capital towns or cities. Ang daming mga mentally challenged na
kababayan natin na nasa baba and the sorry state is they are being caged, very
inhuman karkaru nu psychotic na very harmful nga agbatu (There are many
mentally challenged residents in the barangays and the sorry state is that they
are being caged, which is very inhuman, especially if they get harmful and throw
stones),” she said.
Under the law, Pangilinan said,
municipal health officers are being trained on handling mental health gaps,
blood screening, and administration of medicines. She said that in Kalinga
province alone, there are five registered patients who are now being assisted.
She also lauded the PHIC’s new
system and reforms like the Z-package, which includes a coverage on preventive
health care to prevent health complications among Filipinos.
“We all know that the driver of health reforms is insurance,”
the doctor said, adding that benefits from such reforms are now being felt in
the entire Cordillera region.
Pangilinan also noted a huge
increase in the government's budget for health.
“Meron nang barangay health
stations na malapit sa mga barangay," she said, adding there are now more
local public health nurses and midwives available to the locals,”
Before, she said, Cordillerans,
especially those from remote villages, still had to go to the nearest capital
town for health care. Now, even birthing homes are strategically located, she
said, equipped with trained midwives, supplies, and equipment.
She, however, said more needs
still have to be done to meet the target of having one health worker in every
barangay. --- PNA
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