Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Health Workers to the UN: Be a true instrument to end social injustice, and attain health for all

Press Release
17 September 2013


Reference:

Mr. Jossel I. Ebesate, RN
National President
Alliance of Health Workers
Philippines
Contact No: +63-918-9276381


Today, September 17, 2013, marks the opening of the 68th Annual session of the United Nations (UN) General Assembly where 193 member countries meet “to discuss the steps necessary to improve issues of people everywhere” and at a time when there is widespread and deepening social ills and injustices.

For 68 years, these world leaders who compose this deliberative policy making and organ representative of the United  Nations gather once a year to discuss vital  issues such as poverty, peace, security, human rights, health and disease, inequality and environment”. At this time, world economic  crisis has worsened and health and health care have been directed more by economic policies which are geared towards profit generation.

 The Alliance of Health Workers in solidarity with the Global Nurses United's Global Day of Action, condemns the worsening Philippine health situation brought about by government policies which make the delivery of health services more inaccessible and anti-people. The Aquino government remained numb to the people’s protests against its centerpiece program - the Public Private Partnership including the delivery of health services which essentially privatizes public hospitals and public health services.  This further deprives the poor of the much needed services. The privatization of health has began during the Marcos era and has continued throughout the years, with the Philippine governments having the same template though with different names. Now the Aquino’s Universal Health Care is composed of strategies of health insurance and privatization of public hospitals and other health services. This is nothing but a final step towards the abandonment of state responsibility for people’s health.

With this profit- orientation, it follows that the health workers’ working conditions, wages and benefits have gone from bad to worst. The nurses and health workers suffer from long hours of duty and unjust work overload. The nurse to patient ratio is in average of 1 nurse to 30-40 patients in medical or surgical wards or even up to 100-250 patients in psychiatric wards. There is severe understaffing, with one health worker – a utility worker (UW) covering 2-3 wards, which normally should be covered by 3-6 UWs.  The contractualization, in various forms, which violates the right of any health worker to his/her right to security of tenure, just compensation and benefits, has been a national phenomenon. There are government nurses who are under “job orders” for 3-5 years or has been “casual employees” for 20 years.

“The World Health Organization, as  the trusted authority in directing and coordinating health issues within the United Nations' structure (WHO), should assist developing countries like the Philippines in “attaining the highest possible level of health” through programs which are appropriate and relevant. Like the Health for All by the year 2000, the MDGs (Millennium Development Goals) of the UN together with the IMF-WB, which are said to be a set of development targets for the poor by 2015, is most likely to fail. With less than 1000 days to go, the goal to reduce maternal mortality for example, is very far from the target of 52 per 100,000/live births.

Considering that policies and programs imposed by international financial institutions, i.e. IMF/WB/ADB, are primarily geared for the benefits of big business rather than real development of the people, the Filipinos and other developing countries can never have a healthy living with the worsening economic and political situation that further deprived of them of their right to health. The top down approach to “development” as viewed by big business and being promoted and implemented by international financial institutions, and also transcends to multilateral agencies like the UN and WHO, is further compounded at the national level by national and local politicians who viewed government as a business, where they could amass power and wealth as exemplified by the “P10B Napoles scandal”, at the expense direct services to the people.

Thus, we, the health workers who are witnesses to the daily sufferings of the Filipino people due to social injustice including extreme poverty,  lack of health services, unemployment and lack of basic housing, call on the WHO and the United Nations to stand side by side with the people.  It is not enough to diagnose poverty and prescribe goals and programs for developing countries like the Philippines. The United Nations should truly be an instrument to help end social injustice and uplift the people’s conditions of misery, deprivation and exploitation. Health, being a basic right should never be used for profit and should remain mainly as a state responsibility.

Friday, September 06, 2013

Hospital workers: too much "pork" is unhealthy; abolish pork barrel system, re-channel funds to public health services

Press Release
September 6, 2013

References:

Mr. Eliazar Sobinsky
President, LCPEA-AHW
Contact No: 0932-859-7665
Mr. Bonifacio Carmona
President, PHCEA-AHW
Contact No: 0908-896-0094
Mr. Joey Espanillo
President, NKTIEA-AHW
Contact No: 0917-552-3490

Reminding the public that too much "pork" is unhealthy, hospital workers from Philippine Heart Center (PHC), Lung Center of the Philippines (LCP) and National Kidney and Transplant Institute (NKTI) called for the abolition of pork barrel system including the presidential "pork" in favor of people's health.

"Enough of the pork barrel system! We have had enough of the Aquino government's and Department of Health's lies that there is not enough funds for services!" said Eliazar Sobinsky, president of LCP Employees' Association - Alliance of Health Workers (LCPEA-AHW), in a protest action by hospital workers in front of LCP in Quezon City. 

Sobinksy claimed that the P10B-worth pork barrel scam could have covered the operation of 50,000 service or indigent patients with lung problems, at P200,000 cost per operation. Yet the government is only allotting P173.4M as subsidy for LCP 's indigent patients - an amount even less than a senator's pork barrel in a year. Worse, LCP will be given the same measly amount or no increase at all in the proposed health budget for 2014.

"For heart's sake, President Aquino should truly stand against "pork"! He should start abolishing his own pork and rechannel this to public hospitals. President Aquino should see the poor cardiac patients of PHC who are dying because they do not have money for the operation," said Bonifacio Carmona, president of Philippine Heart Center Employees' Association - Alliance of Health Workers (PHCEA-AHW), and member of AHW national council.

Poor patients in PHC are required to raise tens of thousands to about a hundred thousand as "patient's share" for the operation. Each heart operation costs P350,000 - 600,000.

National Kidney and Transplant Institute Employees' Association (NKTIEA-AHW) president Joey Espanillo said, "we call for the immediate abolition of "pork" barrel system, so we can save more patients' lives, especially those of poor patients with end kidney diseases." 

Espanillo said that dialysis for charity kidney patients are charged P5,000-10,000 per week, or P480,000 per year. Directly funding NKTI poor patients from just a portion of the P24B pork barrel allotment in 2014 can already pay for the dialysis of thousands of patients. Sadly, NKTI subsidy for indigent patients will be cut by 6.8% on 2014, from P202.865M this year to P189M.

"The fight against pork barrel system is a fight for our patients' health and lives. As frontliners in health services, we stand with our poor patients and the Filipino people in the fight against pork barrel system and for adequate budget for public health services," concluded Carmona.#

Saturday, August 03, 2013

Health Workers to DOH: You will find the poor in public hospitals, not at the ivory tower of profit-driven health care

Statement

We from the Alliance of Health Workers are alarmed at the news article titled "DOH: where are the poor?" (PDI, 8/1/2013).

It is incomprehensible that the DOH "could not locate the addresses of the poor in order to deliver their PhilHealth cards..." while the government is proposing P35B for the premium of PhilHealth sponsored members for 2014, a whooping 180% increase from P12.6B allotted in 2013.

The P35 million subsidy targets only the “selected poorest of the poor” by the government’s standard, or those earning below the P52 daily or Php7,821 monthly poverty threshold for a family of five (NSCB, April 2013). This practically leaves all other poor Filipinos. By IBON Databank estimates, poor Filipinos would number some 38-68 million (IBON, July 2013) or 41-73% of the 92 million estimated population in 2012, way above the 26.8 million poor Filipinos by NSCB standard. 

The proposed P35B for PhilHealth subsidy is more than three times the total budget allotment for the 70 DOH-retained hospitals in 2013. Instead of looking for the “poor” through “mapping” or any other complicated methodologies the government could just put this huge amount to the severely underfunded government hospitals, health units and stations, where poor patients go for treatment.  This could make a big difference in the availability of medicines, supplies and equipment badly needed by the poor patients.

The poor are really not difficult to find, if the government and DOH would only go beyond their showcase of private investors-propelled "improvement" of public hospitals and facilities through privatization. If only Secretary Ona and the Aquino administration would go down to the communities and public hospitals and health facilities, and see and feel for themselves the actual situation, they would not only see the poor, they would also realize how irrelevant and how dangerous their health privatization programs are to the health and lives of the poor Filipinos.

Reference:

Mr..Jossel I. Ebesate, RN
National President
Alliance of Health Workers
09189276381

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Health Workers to DOH: Stop deceiving the public, stop privatization of public hospitals

Press Statement
July 27, 2013

Reference:

Mr. Jossel I. Ebesate, RN
Contact No: 09189276381


The Alliance of Health Workers (AHW) told the Department of Health (DOH) to stop deceiving the public in pursuing public-private partnership (PPP) of public hospitals and health services.
“PPP, modernization, or whatever the DOH calls it, the fact is, the government is allowing private investors to profit from health service provision in public hospitals. Public health service provision is the duty of the government,” said Jossel Ebesate, national president of the Alliance of Health Workers.

Ebesate reacted to the statement of DOH Secretary Enrique Ona on Friday, July 26, that the DOH  was “not in favor of privatization”.
 
Ebesate stressed that if indeed the government is indeed not for privatization it should have funded the modernization and improvement of public hospital facilities years ago, instead of passing this role to profiteering private investors. He said that since 1990s, the government through the DOH has been trying to privatize hospitals to cover up for its failure to adequately fund public hospitals and provide for accessible health services to the people.

“The DOH through the years is just changing the terms and packaging, but it is the same privatization policy pushed by the previous administrations.

“Once private investors are allowed into social services like health, whether through PPP, corporatization, or outright sale, the primary purpose is huge profit generation, thus replacing service orientation. This has been proven time and again, most recently with the dramatic increases in water bills as result of privatization of water services,” said Ebesate.

“The DOH is doing a disservice to the Filipino people by consciously making it appear that PPP will benefit the people. The poor people’s experiences in public hospitals up for privatization prove otherwise. Based on our experience in most public hospitals, PPP of selected services only jacked up the price of health services at the expense of our poor patients,” Ebesate, explained.


Ebesate said that Secretary Enrique Ona was further confusing the public by lumping up medical mission initiatives with privatization of health services. #

Friday, July 19, 2013

Closure of Manila’s City Hospitals Will Hurt the Poor

PRESS STATEMENT
July 19, 2013

Reference:

Mr. Jossel I. Ebesate
National President, AHW
Mobile No: 09189276381 

We, health workers in different hospitals under the Alliance of Health Workers, oppose the plan of Mayor Joseph Estrada to close some city hospitals “to lower government expenses and save money.”

The idea to close city hospitals as expressed two Fridays ago (July 5) by the mayor of Manila,  is cruel and heartless. This will negatively affect many poor patients in Manila who rely on these hospitals for services. The six city hospitals, namely Gat Andres Bonifacio Memorial Medical Center, Ospital ng Maynila, Ospital ng Sampaloc, Ospital ng Tondo, Sta. Ana Hospital, and Justice Abad Santos Mother and Child Hospital serve those who cannot afford expensive private health services. Ospital ng Maynila, for instance,  serves more than a thousand out-patients per day and accommodates more than 300 in-patients during peak seasons even if its bed capacity is only 300.

If any of this city hospitals will be closed, residents who usually lacks or even have no means to provide for their basic needs such as food, clothing and shelter  would further delay or worst stop seeking treatment.  This may spell the difference between life and death for most patients.

Closing any of the city hospitals would further add up to the long queue and overcrowding in public hospitals under the national government in the city such as the Philippine General Hospital, Jose R. Reyes Memorial Medical Center, Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital and San Lazaro Hospital.

This dismal situation in terms of funding, staffing and infrastructure of public hospitals is brought about by the continuing neglect and misprioritization by the national government in the national budget.  Instead of addressing the grave lack of funds, the national government devolved and privatized health services to the detriment of the public.

Public hospitals are built primarily to serve the public.  The government, both at the national and local level, is duty-bound to ensure that free, affordable, and accessible public health services are provided to the people. Public hospitals should be improved and developed by the government to better serve the people.

Adequate funding, not closure, will make our public hospitals more relevant and responsive to the needs of the people. Unless the national  or the local government has the political will to really serve the people through adequate, free, affordable and accessible health services, health for all will remain as it is - a dream.#

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

UP Kilos Na Condemns the Imposition of Charges on Previously Free Laboratory Procedures for Class D Patients of the Philippine General Hospital

July 16, 2013

UP Kilos Na supports the All-UP Workers Alliance and the Alliance of Health Workers in condemning the imposition of charges on previously free laboratory procedures for Class D patients of PGH and for adding new requirements to avail for free of succeeding examinations previously availed of free of charge. These changes are contained in the July 4, 2013 Memorandum of PGH Director Jose C. Gonzales with the subject: “Revised Rates of the Department of Laboratories.”

The memo details the “revised rates” for laboratory exams in PGH starting July 12, 2013. Prior to this issuance of the memorandum, 192 of 254 laboratory procedures/examinations were free for Class D patients of PGH. Now with the new policy, only 44 are free for the FIRST examinations. Payment for the succeeding examinations “maybe (underscoring ours) waived upon the recommendation of the Department Chair and the submission of the following documents for the purpose of requesting for a guarantee letter:
  1. Clinical Abstract with a therapeutic plan and approximate cost of treatment
  2. Personal letter of the patient or family to the congressman of his/her place of residence requesting for financial assistance. “
Class D patients in PGH are those whose monthly income is around or below the National Capital Region minimum wage rate.  Also included in Class D are those who are recent victims of fire, floods and other natural disaster and patients with chronic debilitating disease or catastrophic illness. In PGH’s charity wards and charity ICU, almost 98% of the patients are Class D.

PGH has already a system for the processing of a Class D category which is handled by its Medical Social Services Department (MSSD). It already takes a tremendous amount of time to line up for the various requirements to prove one’s abject poverty and to be categorized as Class D patient in PGH. The policy related to changes in the laboratory fees of PGH as contained in the memo clearly makes it more difficult for the poor to access the services of the PGH. This new policy will further add to the travails of our poor: request for reconsideration from the Chair of a PGH Department and a letter for financial assistance from the congressman or representative of his/her province.

The reduction of the number of free laboratory examinations for Class D patients and the additional requirements to avail of free service for succeeding examinations are being implemented at a time when the allocation for Maintenance and Other Operating Expenses (MOOE) of PGH has increased from P305.549 million in 2012 to over twice that amount to P616.903 million for 2013! This budget increase is partly due to the strong public support for the call and mobilization of the UP community for greater state subsidy for UP and PGH.

UP Kilos Na supported in 2010 the fight of Dr. Gonzales against his unjust ouster as PGH Director by the Roman Administration. The issue was principally against the violation of the principles of democratic governance of the Roman administration for unseating Dr. Gonzales who was democratically elected by the BOR and who had already taken his oath of office as Director. But UP Kilos Na support for Dr. Gonzales was his stand against the setting up of a private medical laboratory in the guise of providing clinics for PGH doctors inside the PGH compound.

In 2010, when a forum was held at the Philippine General Hospital on the proposed transformation of FMAB into a private facility run by the Daniel Mercado Medical Center, Dr. Jose Gonzales, then not holding any administrative position spoke against such move. A report by Krizia C. Borromeo of that meeting posted on September 28, 2010 on the MEDICS, the official student publication of the UP College of Medicine (http://www.upmedics.com/2010/09/pgh-privatization-will-fmab-bring-more.html, accessed 15 July 2013) quoted Dr. Gonzales as saying that “PGH is a service hospital for economically depressed patients who can’t afford to see private doctors.” Further, he is quoted as saying “May karapatan ang mahihirap. We should do our part to serve the people..kung hindi walang mangyayari. The public-private partnership will not solve the root cause of the problem—inefficiency.”

But now PGH Director Jose C. Gonzales considers free laboratory services to the poor inefficient and under the guise of “rationalization” and “efficiency” has in fact imposed charges on previously free availment of procedures and added bureaucratic layers to the process. While ostensibly this new policy is supposed to discourage PGH doctors from ordering unnecessary laboratory procedures for poor patients, it has in fact further shifted the burden to the poor patients who now have to pay or to beg for a waiver from the Department Chair. The memo came out in inopportune time when health inequalities in our society are becoming more blatant. The new policy only worsened the already unhealthy state of many of our society’s poor population, and trounced their right to health. Coupled with the increase in charges in the pay wards and private rooms of PGH, the “ospital ng bayan” is now trodding the path of private hospitals which are profit centers with charity patients.

UP Kilos Na condemns this betrayal of PGH Director Jose C. Gonzales of his promise to make PGH more accessible to the poor; to find ways to reduce the long lines faced by poor patients seeking PGH’s services and to stand up against commercialization of PGH such as the FMAB scheme of the previous PGH Administration. Instead under the guise of rationalization, increasing efficiency and preventing superfluous orders for laboratory examinations, he is now implementing a scheme of requiring poor patients to pay. Rather squeezing the poor of every ounce to recover costs, health care should be given to them for free! The brunt of state abandonment of our health care and services must not be passed on to the poor.

UP Kilos Na therefore urges PGH Director Jose C. Gonzales to rescind this discriminatory anti-poor policy. We call on administrators, faculty, and staff of PGH to forge strong solidarity with other progressive sectors of our society to clamor for higher health budget! Together we should stand to arrest the deteriorating health of our health services! The duty of health professionals is not just to save lives but to prevent the subjection of lives to contrived unhealthy and dehumanizing conditions!  

Monday, July 15, 2013

Health groups negotiate with DOH; protest the privatization of public hospitals

Press Release
July 15, 2013

References:

Dr. Julie Caguiat, NOP convenor, 0946-2278218
Mr. Jossel Ebesate, RN, AHW National President, 0918-9276381

Health workers, practitioners and community organizations under the Network Opposed to Privatization of Health Services (NOP) formally sought negotiations with Department of Health (DOH) Secretary Enrique Ona today to stop the privatization of public hospitals.

"This is not the first time we speak out against privatization of public hospitals. Still we are hoping DOH Secretary Ona will hear us out, in behalf of all the poor Filipino patients who are depending on our public hospitals for treatment. This is all about the health and lives of our people. We cannot just give up with this fight,"
said Dr. Julie Caguiat, convenor of NOP and Executive Director of Community Medicine Development Foundation.

Among those projects being protested by the group include the public-private partnership of Philippine Orthopedic Center, the sale of National Center for Mental Health, the proposed PPP projects in different hospitals nationwide, and corporatization of hospitals. The groups also raised questions on the proposed modern hospital complex in the DOH compound that will transfer the Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital, and supposedly "modernize" Jose R. Reyes Memorial Medical Center, and San Lazaro Hospital.

"We are for the improvement and development of public hospitals and health facilities, but this should be done by the government itself and be geared towards providing free, accessible and affordable health services especially for the poor.
The Aquino government’s highly touted PPP program for public hospitals, which is just a sanitized name for privatization, is anathema and an abandonment of the government’s constitutional mandate to protect and promote the people’s right to health. The interest for insatiable profits by big business is in contradiction to the very essence of existence of public hospitals, which is to provide quality, affordable and accessible health services for all the people," said Jossel Ebesate, national president of Alliance of Health Workers.

Anti-privatization groups raised concerns that the entry of private investors in public hospitals and health services will further raise the cost of health services in public hospitals and displace poor patients.

“By letting private corporations take over public hospitals’ operations in the guise of “modernization, efficiency, and financial viability”, the government in effect has made profit instead of service as its priority. The much-touted Philhealth subsidy for the people cannot replace the state- run public health facilities and services,” Dr. Caguiat said.

Aside from NOP, other groups expressed opposition against the privatization of public hospitals and health services, including urban poor, workers, women, and most recently the church groups.#


Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Global Nurses United of Nurse, Healthcare Worker Unions was Born

Global Nurses United

For Immediate Release

References:


Mr. Kenneth S. Zinn
Political Director
National Nurses United
8630 Fenton Street
Suite 1100
Silver Spring, Maryland 20910
United States
Email: kzinn@nationalnursesunited.org
Tel: +1-(240) 235-2008
Fax: +1-(240) 235-2019

For the Philippines:

Mr. Jossel I. Ebesate, RN
National President
Alliance of Health Workers
Mobile:
Phils: +63-918-927-6381
US: +1-415-837-8154
Email: jiebesate@yahoo.com


Aims to Step Up Fight against Austerity, Privatization, Attacks on Public Health
And Work for Safe Nurse Staffing Ratios and Improved Patient Care for All

SAN FRANCISCO – Leaders of the premiere nurses and health care workers unions in 14 nations in the Americas, Asia, and Europe have announced plans to form a new international organization to step up the fight against the harmful effects of austerity measures, privatization, and cuts in health care services that they say are putting people and communities at risk across the planet.

Calling the new formation Global Nurses United, leaders of the initial endorsing countries said they would also work collectively to guarantee the highest standards of universal healthcare as a human right for all, to secure safe patient care, especially with safe nurse-to-patient ratios, and safe health care workplaces.

Endorsers of the San Francisco declaration included top nurse and health care worker unions from Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras, Ireland, the Philippines, South Africa, South Korea, and the United States.

0613_GNU_Meeting
Leaders of the newly formed Global Nurses United

Pledging to work “together with all health care workers and other people committed to economic and social justice,” the leaders of Global Nurses United said they are also unified in opposition to the adverse effects of income inequality, poverty, mal distribution of wealth and resources, attacks on public workers, and the ravages of climate change.

As participants noted, there are international union formations of other sectors ranging from teachers to steel workers.  Now nurses have one as well, said enthusiastic GNU participants.

The founding meeting was hosted by National Nurses United, the largest U.S. union and organization of nurses, and chaired by NNU’s executive director RoseAnn DeMoro. “The unity and determination of nurse and healthcare worker unions to come together and push to protect all our people is a profound expression of how deeply the neoliberal agenda is coordinating and devastating countries and lowering standards worldwide,” DeMoro said.

"The trend of governments abdicating its inherent responsibility of providing basic services such as health care to its people in favor of big profits by big business must be stopped. It is now time that we, the health care workers all over the world, take the initiative and unite with all sectors of society in fighting against the anti-people neoliberal policy of privatization of health care.  Privatization kills people in the name of profits, it is in fact anathema to service to the people" said Mr. Jossel Ebesate, a delegate from the Philippines, and National President of Alliance of Health Workers in the Philippines.    

Taking action, the unions said, will be a major focus of Global Nurses United. GNU members said they will kick off the new organization with a series of protests in every member nation in September coinciding with the opening of the next session of the United Nations General Assembly. The focus of the actions will likely be austerity, privatization of health and other public services, and other attacks on health services, with specific actions and targets tailed to national priorities.

In the initial meeting June 22, participants in nearly every country described similar crises of erosion of health and other basic services and public protections, attacks on the rights, living standards, and even personal security of nurses and other workers.

In every nation the workers are in motion, challenging austerity measures imposed by conservative governments or globalized corporate assaults, with strikes and other major protests. With Global Nurses United, the unions said they will be able to better coordinate such actions, provide international solidarity, and offer each other support and assistance.

As the participants said in their opening declaration, “We, the leaders of international nurses and healthcare unions affirm our intention to work collectively to protect our professions, our patients, our communities, our work, our health, our environment, and our planet.”

Representatives of the following unions participating in the initial GNU meeting:

Argentina –  FESPROSA
Australia – Australian Nursing Federation, ANF Victoria Branch, New South Wales Nurses and Midwives Association, Queensland Nurses Union
Brazil – Sindicato dos Enfermeiros, Sindicato dos Enfermeiros of São Paulo
Canada – Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions, United Nurses of Alberta, Fédération interprofessionnelle de la santé du Québec
Costa Rica – Associacion Nacional de Profesionalies en Enfermeria
Dominican Republic – Sindicato Nacional de Trabajadores de Enfermeria
Guatemala – Sindicato Nacional de los Trabadores de Salud de Guatemala
Honduras – Asociation Nacional de Enfermeras/os Auxiliares de Honduras
Ireland – Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation
Israel – National Association of Nurse
Philippines – Alliance of Health Workers
South Africa – Democratic Nursing Organisation of South Africa
South Korea – Korean Health and Medical Workers Union,  Catholic Medical Center Local Union, Korean Health and Medical Workers Union
United States – National Nurses United

Nurses' Declaration of San Francisco, June 22, 2013


Nurse Leaders from 13 countries in 6 continents who signed the declaration
We, the leaders of international nurses and healthcare unions affirm our intention to work collectively to protect our professions, our patients, our communities, our work, our health, our environment, and our planet.

To achieve these goals we declare the formation of Global Nurses United working together with all healthcare workers and other people committed to economic and social justice.

We are dedicated to international solidarity, support, and assistance around the following principles:

  •  We oppose the harmful effects on our nations, our people, and our communities of globalization, neo-liberal policies, austerity, poverty, income inequality and mal distribution of wealth and resources, attacks on public workers, and climate change.
  • We will resist the privatization of our public health systems and cuts in health care services.
  • We will assist the efforts of nurses in all of our countries to secure safe care for all patients with safe nurse-to-patient staffing ratios and a safe workplace.
  • We pledge our commitment for governments to guarantee the highest standards of universal health care as a fundamental, human right for all.
Nurses and health care unions from the following initial countries expressed their support to the declaration: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras, Ireland, Israel, Philippines, South Africa, South Korea, and the United States

Friday, June 07, 2013

Manggagawang Pangkalusugan maging Mapagbantay! Paglilipat ng Fabella Hospital, Tiyaking para sa Kapakanan ng Mamamayan

Photo credits to Dr. Iggy Agbayani
Sa June 11, 2013 nakatakda ang pre-bid conference para sa pagtatayo ng bagong building ng Dr. Jose Fabella Memorial Hospital. Nabigo ang naunang bidding nito noong Marso. Itatayo ang 9-palapag na building sa loob ng DOH compound. P750 milyon ang nakalaan para dito mula sa pambansang badyet ayon mismo sa Department of Health.

Ano ang kaugnayan ng bagong building ng Fabella sa kabuuang planong corporatization at Public Private-Partnership (PPP) ng mga pampublikong ospital? Ano ang kaugnayan nito sa integration ng tri-hospital complex ng Jose R. Reyes Memorial Medical Center, San Lazaro Hospital, at Fabella? Ito ba ay naayon sa implementasyon ng Executive Order 366 o Restructuring and Streamlining of National Bureaucracy?

Kinokorporatisa na ang Western Visayas Medical Center (Iloilo), habang nasa bidding ang PPP ng Philippine Orthopedic Center. Nakaamba ang korporatisasyon ng 26 pampublikong ospital sa buong bansa.

Tama lang na ayusin at imodernisa ng pamahalaan ang pasilidad ng ospital sapagkat responsibildad ito ng pamahalaan. Ngunit ito ay dapat magsilbi para sa kapakanan at kagalingan ng pasyente at mamamayan, hindi para pagkakitaan at pagkamalan ng malaking tubo ng malaking negosyo.

Ano ang implikasyon nito sa serbisyong pangaklusugan at pasyente ng Fabella? Matitiyak ba ang security of tenure ng mga manggagawang pangkalusugan? Nakakapag-alala ang pananahimik ng DOH sa usaping ito.

Huwag tayong magsawalang-kibo, huwag tayong magwalang-bahala. Maging mapanuri at mapagbantay! Ipaglaban ang kalusugan at kapakanan ng pasyente at manggagawang pangkalusugan.

Tutulan at labanan ang pribatisasyon ng serbisyong pangkalusugan!
Ipaglaban ang sapat na badyet para sa mga pampublikong ospital!
Ipaglaban ang abot-kaya at libreng serbisyong pangkalusugan! 

Wednesday, June 05, 2013

Health Workers to DOH: Stop deceiving the public, stop the privatization of Philippine Orthopedic Center

Press Statement


References:

Mr. Jossel Ebesate, RN
Mobile No: 09189276381

Mr. Robert Mendoza, RM
Mobile No. 0932-4649757


Members of AHW and some urban poor group in front of NKTI main gate yeterday June 4 opposing the privatization of POC. Yesterday was the scheduled last day of bid submission for the private construction and operation of a "modernized" POC.
The Alliance of Health Workers (AHW) told the Department of Health (DOH) to stop deceiving the public in pursuing public-private partnership (PPP) of the Philippine Orthopedic Center (POC).

“The DOH is doing a disservice to the Filipino people by consciously making it appear that PPP will benefit the people. Based on our experience in most public hospitals,  PPP of selected services only jacked up the price of health services at the expense of our poor patients,” said Jossel Ebesate, national president of AHW.

Ebesate reacted to the statement yesterday of DOH Undersecretary Ted Herbosa: "that PPP is not privatization and that PPP and BOT will not alter the service provision to patients."

Ebesate stressed that indeed modernization and improvement of public hospital facilities is long overdue but this should be done by the government and should not be passed on to private investors.

“Provision of public health services is an essential government function and responsibility. Once private investors are allowed into health service provision, whether through PPP, corporatization, or outright sale, the primary purpose is huge profit generation, thus replacing service orientation.

People's safety and lives should not be left to the profiteering whims of the private investors. If the government is indeed sincere in improving people's health, it should allot adequate fund and invest in public health services,” said Ebesate.  

Health workers and anti-privatization advocates under the AHW, the Network Opposed to Privatization, and Koalisyon Laban sa Pagsasapripado ng POC staged a protest action yesterday in front of the National Kidney and Transplant Institute while the bidding for POC modernization was going on. #

Friday, May 24, 2013

Health workers, together with the patients and the people, heighten protests as DOH continues the POC bidding! People Demand Right to Health!


PRESS RELEASE
May 24, 2013

References:
    
Mr, Jossel I. Ebesate, RN, MAN(c ),President, Alliance of Health Workers
Mobile No: 09189276381
Mr. Sean Herbert G. Velchez, RN, President, National Orthopedic Hospital Workers Union
Mobile No: 09206249961

The health workers from different hospitals and the urban poor communities, led by the POC health workers, wearing black arm bands and streamers of No to Sale of POC hanged all over the walls of Orthopedic Center,  held a protest action outside the hospital.  They are joined in also by sympathetic patients of the orthopedic center and their relatives, whose loud and continued chants are “Health, a basic right of the people! (Health) Service, not profit-orientation! (Kalusugan, karapatan ng mamamayan! Serbisyo, wag gawing negosyo!). No to Sale of POC!”.  The speeches which express solidarity to their cause and the program was  interspersed with noise barrage to let the POC management, DOH and the prospective bidders and visitors hear and possibly feel their disgust and strong protest  against the sale of POC.

Mr. Sean Velchez, the president of NOHWU-AHW (National Orthopedic Hospital Worker’s Union-Alliance of Health Workers) said, “Ironically, while the DOH (Department of Health) never admitted that POC is up for sale, Undersecretary T.  Herbosa publicly declared the extension of bidding of Philippine Orthopedic Center (POC) up to May 24, 2013, today. This shows the callousness of DOH to the people’s plight.”

“This clearly shows how unreliable the government public statements are, specifically regarding the truth of PPP (Public Private Partnership) in health.  During  the height of our   information campaign on the government’s  privatization of hospitals, the DOH  repeatedly deny  this, calling us “hard headed” and “a small group that refuses to understand”,  but  whatever they label  us,  health workers,  we, whom they called “hard-headed” people  remained to stand  for the  people’s right to health.  We firmly believe that privatization will deprive the people especially the poor of the much needed health care,” he added.

As showcased by DOH (Department of Health) last October 2012 in a forum for “Excellence for PPPs in Health”, this so called  Modernization of the Philippine Orthopedic Center (MOPC), is a part of the Aquino Health Agenda which claims to provide affordable and accessible health care.

Mr. Jossel Ebesate, AHW President, said “through what they call “modernization”, the giant private corporation/s who win/s the bid will be made to finance the P5.43 B of the P5.69 B total project cost.  Moreover, this new hospital which will be called, “Center for Bone and Joint Diseases, Trauma and Rehabilitation Medicine”, will be headed by a board of trustees composed of 2 government representatives and 3 private representatives. Eventually, no matter how the DOH strongly denies it, POC will turn into a private corporation and thus, can no longer provide free nor affordable health services for the people, especially the majority poor. Also the private company has the right to hire and fire employees.”

Refusing to be deceived and be intimidated by the statements of the government, the health workers will continue the series of protests that will hound  the bidding process of POC and other plans to further privatize the public health care .  “We will insist the people’s right to health and we will continue the campaign against privatization of POC and other (26) public hospitals,” Mr. Velchez added.