Home Blog Page 4657

Trade delegation pitches chip projects to Dutch companies

High Tech NL

THE Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) made its pitch in the Netherlands for more semiconductor investment, citing the Philippines’ capable workforce and surging global chip demand.

Trade Secretary Alfredo E. Pascual made the remarks during a roundtable in the Netherlands on semiconductors, automotive components, and integrated circuit design on June 30.

The conference was attended by Dutch semiconductor and high-tech companies in the Nijmegen and Eindhoven areas, where most of the country’s major tech companies are based. The participants are members of the industry association High Tech NL Semiconductors.

Mr. Pascual said the Philippines offers “a one-of-a-kind opportunity to reduce costs while maximizing value-add to effectively service worldwide clients.”

Mr. Pascual cited recent reforms such as the Corporate Recovery and Tax Incentives for Enterprises Act, which offers foreign investors more attractive and rationalized incentives, as well as the amended Public Service Act, Foreign Investments Act, and Retail Trade Liberalization Act that ease the restrictions on foreign ownership in certain industries.

“The Philippines boasts a vast number of engineers and robust workforce, having a nearly competitive integrated circuit (IC) design engineers and experience in Fin field-effect transistor (FinFET) technology,” he added.

FinFET technology is used in home computers, laptops, tablets, smartphones, wearables, high-end networks, and automotive electronics.

The Philippine semiconductor industry has set a 5% export growth target for 2023. Last year, the industry posted 6.88% export growth to $49.09 billion.

The chip industry meeting is part of the DTI’s Europe Investment Roadshow, which runs until July 6. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

June inflation estimated at 5.4% — DBS

PHILIPPINE STAR/ MICHAEL VARCAS

HEADLINE inflation in June is likely to have declined for a fifth straight month to 5.4% due to base effects from the year-earlier period alongside easing prices for food and energy products, DBS Bank Ltd. said.

In a July 3 report, DBS Bank Senior FX Strategist Philipp Wee and Economist Chua Han Teng said the inflation data, due for release on July 5, Wednesday will likely reflect a continued easing in inflationary pressure.

“For the Philippines, favorable base effects should have allowed headline inflation to cool to 5.4% year on year from 6.1% in May, due to broad-based moderation across core, food, and energy-related items,” the bank said.

The bank’s inflation estimate for June is lower than the 5.5% median estimate of 17 analysts in a BusinessWorld poll last week.

It is also within the 5.3-6.1% forecast range of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) for the month.

The June 2022 reading had been 6.1%.

If June inflation comes in as projected, it would mark the 15th consecutive month that inflation breached the BSP’s 2-4% target range.

“The incoming data is likely to provide comfort to the BSP to extend its steady interest rate path to ensure headline inflation returns to its 2-4% target by end-2023,” DBS Bank said.  

The Monetary Board extended its policy pause for a second straight meeting in June, keeping the benchmark rate at a near 16-year high of 6.25%. The monetary authorities had hiked borrowing costs by 425 basis points between May 2022 and March 2023.

DBS Bank expects Philippine benchmark interest rates to remain steady at 6.25% this year, before easing to 5.75% in the first quarter of 2024. It also expects the BSP to cut the key policy rate further to 5.25% in the second quarter next year.

DBS Bank sees inflation averaging 5.4% this year, before easing to 3.2% in 2024.

The 2023 projection is in line with the BSP’s 5.4% full-year inflation forecast, while the estimate for 2024 is higher than the central bank’s 2.9%.

Separately, in a report dated July 4, Pantheon Macroeconomics also gave an inflation estimate of 5.4% for June due to moderating food and transport costs.  

“We reckon that core (inflation) will fall below 7% for the first time since December,” it added.

Core inflation, which discounts volatile food and fuel prices, slowed to 7.7% in May from 7.9% a month earlier. It has averaged 7.8% this year.

Newly appointed BSP Governor Eli M. Remolona said inflation will return to the 2-4% target range before the year ends.

The Monetary Board’s next policy meeting is on Aug. 17. — Keisha B. Ta-asan

Consultations ongoing for further amendments to Fisheries Code

PHOTOGRAPH © ALO LANTIN/WWF-PHILIPPINES/ WWF.ORG.PH

THE Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) and commercial fishing companies are currently in discussions on possible new amendments to the Fisheries Code, the BFAR said.

In a virtual forum on Tuesday, Rommel Adolf I. Diciano, head of BFAR’s conservation and environmental protection section, said consultations are ongoing with various segments of the fishing industry.

“Pertaining to the amendments to the fisheries law that we are proposing, this is undergoing consultation and we have asked the various sectors… to (propose) possible amendments to our fisheries law,” he said.

“But rest assured, in the spirit of policy democracy, we want to get your side… your participation is important as you witness the real situations,” he added.

Republic Act (RA) No. 10654 or the Amended Philippine Fisheries Code of the Philippines has most recently been amended to address illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing (IUUF), a condition for the Philippines to continue enjoying trade privileges with blocs like the European Union (EU).

“It bears noting that the Philippine Fisheries Code was amended as part of the international commitment specifically to the EU, after a yellow card warning was issued for failure to address IUU fishing,” Rose-Liza Eisma-Osorio, acting vice-president of Oceana Philippines, said.

Edlyn L. Rosales, leader of fisherfolk group Pagkakaisa ng mga Samahan ng Mangingisda (Pangisda)-Bataan, said amendments would be premature as the revised law has not even been fully implemented.

“We haven’t fully used RA 10654 since it was amended from RA 8550,” she said.

Ms. Rosales said that the bureau needs to show “real teeth” for the benefit of fisherfolk, adding that code violations are rampant within Philippine waters.

Maraming magagandang batas na nasa loob ng RA 10654 kaso ang problema kasi natin doon ay walang tiyak na inilagay or binigyan ng power ’yong ating gobyerno para sa tiyak na magpapa-implement ng mga nilalaman (RA 10654 has many good provisions, but the problem is that it lacks specific enforcement powers),” she added.

Ms. Eisma-Osorio highlighted the need for more transparency in addressing IUUF, particularly vessel monitoring measures.

She called for “transparency in vessel information, fishing activity, and governance and management in general.”

The National Government suspended vessel monitoring measures for commercial fishing boats through a memorandum signed by Executive Secretary Lucas P. Bersamin, “pending the final resolution over its constitutionality by the Supreme Court.

Last month, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. ordered the Department of Agriculture and BFAR to draft the necessary issuances for the implementation of the Fisheries Administrative Order No. 266. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

Industry group asks dealers to shun uncertified pipe products

THE Philippine Association of Black Iron and Galvanized Iron Pipes and Tubes Manufacturers, Inc. said hardware stores need to join the campaign against uncertified steel products, citing the danger to consumers of their continued proliferation. 

“I implore each hardware retailer to view consumers as part of your family whom you (must) protect and give your best. Surely, this perspective will drive us toward higher regard for the technical regulations set by the mandatory product certification of steel,” the industry association’s President Mauro Dela Rosa Arce said during a recent industry event.

Trade Undersecretary Ruth B. Castelo called the steel pipe industry “an active partner of the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) in its quest to provide consumers with high-quality steel pipes. Our longstanding cooperation through the years manifests our common appreciation of these iron steel pipes as raw materials which must be of the highest standard to ensure that consumers will produce the most durable and safest steam, water, gas, and air lines, and steel frame structures,” Ms. Castelo said.

The DTI’s Bureau of Philippine Standards currently requires such products to undergo product certification.

The process includes testing to earn the Philippine Standard quality and/or safety certification mark or import commodity clearance certification.

Department Administrative Order No. 19-16 issued in December 2019 lays down the new technical regulations for the certification of steel pipes. — Revin Mikhael D. Ochave

Dalton Pass project cost initially estimated at P37 billion

THE Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) said the Pre-Appraisal Mission of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) has estimated the construction cost of the Dalton Pass East Alignment Road Project at P37 billion.

In a statement on Tuesday, the DPWH said the week-long discussions on the road project concluded on July 3.

The Dalton Pass links Nueva Ecija and Nueva Vizcaya and forms part of the road network leading to the Cagayan Valley in northeastern Luzon. The pass is a segment of the Pan-Philippine Highway.

“We are very pleased with the progress we have made in our discussions with the JICA Pre-Appraisal Mission and we look forward to securing the support of the government of Japan for the Dalton Pass East Alignment Road Project,” DPWH Senior Undersecretary Emil K. Sadain said.

The DPWH, the JICA Pre-Appraisal Mission, the Department of Finance, and the National Economic and Development Authority were involved in the technical discussions of the project.

The DPWH is proposing that the project be funded via the JICA’s Special Terms for Economic Loans, which will allow the deployment of Japanese expertise in tunnel excavation, construction, and operation and maintenance.

The Dalton Pass East Alignment Road is a proposed four-lane 23.5-kilometer road that will decongest the route and address regular closures at the current pass due to natural disasters.

The alternate road connects San Jose City, Nueva Ecija to Aritao, Nueva Vizcaya.

According to the DPWH, the project will result in the construction of a High Standard Road with twin-tube long distance tunnels and 10 bridges.

On Feb. 12, President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. and Japanese Prime Minister Kishida Fumio agreed on early loan arrangements for the Dalton Pass East Alignment Alternative Road and two other projects.

The other two projects are the Central Mindanao High-Standard Highway and Second San Juanico Bridge. — Justine Irish D. Tabile

FAO to collaborate in PHL agricultural resilience program

REUTERS

THE Department of Agriculture (DA) said the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) will help the Philippines make its agriculture and fisheries industry more resilient.

In a statement, the DA said the two sides are helping rural communities adapt to climate-related disasters.

FAO Country Representative to the Philippines Lionel Dabbadie cited the need to “invest in science (and) technology… and support innovation (of measures that can be scaled up).”

The DA and FAO are pursuing the Adapting Philippine Agriculture to Climate Change project supported by the Green Climate Fund, and another initiative known as Anticipatory Actions or Forecast-based Financing.

The resiliency initiative will be directed at 1.25 million poor farmers and five million indirect beneficiaries.

Implementation runs to 2030 in the Cagayan Valley, Bicol, Northern Mindanao, Soccsksargen, and the Cordillera regions.

“The FAO has been a long-time partner of the Department in developing the resiliency of farmers and fisherfolk through collaborative projects,” DA Assistant Secretary Arnel V. de Mesa said. — Sheldeen Joy Talavera

SC rebukes police, prosecutors in drug acquittal

PHILSTAR FILE PHOTO

THE PHILIPPINE Supreme Court (SC) has slammed local authorities’ “reprehensible” handling of a P1-billion illegal drug case that led to the acquittal of all five Chinese suspects and a Filipino.

In a ruling dated Feb. 21 and made public on June 30, the tribunal said it had no choice but to acquit the two alleged members of a drug syndicate, reversing their conviction due to procedural blunders by law enforcers, prosecutors and a Valenzuela trial court.

“The court beseeches all actors in the administration of criminal justice in our jurisdiction to effectively carry out their respective duties and responsibilities, keeping in mind that any failure on their part will likely result in an acquittal,” according to the ruling written by Chief Justice Alexander G. Gesmundo.

It said law enforcers violated the law when they failed to have a witness from the Department of Justice (DoJ) during an inventory of the seized illegal drugs.

The tribunal ordered the Bureau of Corrections to immediately release the two suspects — Chinese national Willie Gan and Filipino Robert T. Uy — from detention. The trial court had acquitted the four other suspects — Chinese nationals Jackie Ong, Co Ching Ki, Tan Ty Siao and Go Siak Ping.

It had sentenced Mr. Gan to up to 14 years and eight months in prison, while Mr. Uy got a life term for drug trafficking and up to 14 years and eight months for illegal drug possession.

The six, who were arrested in 2003, were accused of distributing and illegally delivering more than nine kilos of crystal meth. They were also charged with illegal possession of 119 kilos of the drug and 111 kilos of chloromethamphetamine hydrochloride.

Under the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act, a representative from the media, Justice department and an elected public official must be present during a drug inventory.

The law was amended in 2014 to require only two witnesses to fast-track the production of evidence.

Police had also failed to take photographs of the illegal drugs seized, which is also required by law, the High Court said. “The utter disregard for the law demonstrated by these actors is reprehensible.”

The Court of Appeals affirmed the twin convictions and fined Mr. Uy P10 million as it upheld their warrantless arrest.

The appellate court said the chain of command was not broken since the arresting officers did not have enough time to secure the needed witnesses.

It said Mr. Uy could not have had actual possession of the illegal drugs seized from the warehouse since he was already in police custody, when law enforcers were taking inventory of the illegal drugs.

The tribunal also acquitted Mr. Gan, who did not appeal his conviction after prosecutors failed to prove his possession of the illegal drugs.

The High Court also questioned the trial court’s acquittal of the four other Chinese suspects based on prosecutors’ alleged failure to prove that they had bribed police officers with 10 kilos of crystal meth.

It also said the Valenzuela trial court had imposed the wrong penalty on Mr. Gan of up to 14 years in prison. Possession of illegal drugs is punishable with life imprisonment, it said.

“Truly, the acquittal in the instant case is ordained by the multiple errors, whether through negligence or misfeasance, committed by the prosecution, the defense and the trial court,” the High Court said. — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Congress urged to pass more pro-people bills

BW FILE PHOTO

By Beatriz Marie D. Cruz, Reporter

CONGRESS should pass more concrete and pro-people measures in the second year of the Marcos administration, political analysts said.

“The 19th Congress is no different from the past Congresses,” Arjan P. Aguirre, a political science professor at the Ateneo De Manila University, said via Facebook Messenger chat. “We have a passive Legislature that wants to please an over-powerful president.”

He noted that while congressmen have approved mostly priority measures of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr., reform- and development-oriented bills have largely been ignored by the Senate and House of Representatives.

Congress adjourned on May 31, having approved several priority bills including the estate tax amnesty extension, creation of regional specialty hospitals, condonation of unpaid agrarian reform loans and a bill setting a fixed term for military officials.

It also passed the Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) Act, which has faced issues on security, glitches and a “black market” for registered SIM cards.

Congress also approved a measure postponing village and youth council elections in October, which the Supreme Court voided last week for being illegal.

Both Houses also approved the so-called Maharlika Investment Fund bill, which Mr. Marcos Jr. certified as urgent.

“The laws and bills that have been approved by Congress often hold little relevance to the daily struggles of the ordinary Filipino worker,” Federation of Free Workers President Jose “Sonny” G. Matula said in a Viber chat.

He cited the rightsizing bill, which the House passed in March, as a “severe blow to the security of tenure of government employees and stands in contrast to the pro-labor pledges made.”

He called on lawmakers to ratify the International Labour Organization (ILO) Conventions 190 and 151, which are pro-worker treaties.

Mr. Matula urged congressmen to start deliberations on a Senate-approved bill creating a job creation plan, as well as a P150-wage increase bill.

“All Congress does is conduct probes and hearings but there’s no result,” Federation of Free Farmers National Manager Raul Q. Montemayor said via Viber.

He said Congress should pass bills to curb smuggling and undervaluation of imports and identify the best use of land.

He added that lawmakers should amend the Rice Tariffication Act by reallowing the state to slap import limits, returning guidelines of the National Food Authority, and reconfiguring the Rice Competitiveness Enhancement Fund.

The Senate concurred with the ratification of the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), the world’s largest free trade agreement. Agricultural groups are worried about its effects on the sector.

Chester B. Cabalza, founding president of Manila-based International Development and Security Cooperation, cited the “lack of alternative solutions” on national security concerns.

“Politicians always question and complain about the power rivalry in the South China Sea without giving complex solutions to maritime security,” he said in a Messenger chat. “Some of them are not knowledgeable about national security frameworks and can’t offer us intelligent strategic options and a clear security policy.”

China, which claims more than 80% of the South China Sea, has ignored a 2016 ruling by a United Nations-backed arbitration court that voided its claim based on a 1940s map.

The Philippines has been unable to enforce the ruling and has since filed hundreds of protests over what it calls encroachment and harassment by China’s coast guard and its vast fishing fleet.

Analysts also called on lawmakers to show proper demeanor in its sessions.

“The decorum in the chamber seems to be going downhill,” Jean S. Encinas-Franco, a political science professor at the University of the Philippines, said via Viber.

Senator and former action star Robin C. Padilla was criticized for not knowing how to make a motion in plenary, while Senator and former national police chief Ronald M. Dela Rosa knelt before police officials at a hearing.

The behavior of some lawmakers shows the influence of Mr. Marcos’ predecessor, Rodrigo R. Duterte, analysts said.

“The Duterte regime somehow set a new standard of politics in the Philippines by allowing politicians to resort to vulgarity, toxicity, unpredictability and crass tendencies to intersect with the formalities, regularity, temperance and restraints of institutionalized politics,” Mr. Aguirre said.

He noted how the past administration “kept the regime stable by using the populist style of rule to dominate political rule and governance.”

LinkedIn: Philippine STEM gender job gap worst in region

The field test trial of the University of the Philippines Diliman’s Institute of Civil Engineering team's Column Footing Grade Beam Monolith.

THE PHILIPPINES had the widest employment gap in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) workforce in the Asia-Pacific region, according to professional networking platform LinkedIn.

The Southeast Asian nation had a gender employment gap of 22% in STEM, the social media site said in a statement, citing its own data used earlier in a World Economic Forum report on gender equality.

In the Philippines, women accounted for 58.8% of the workforce in non-STEM fields but only 36.3% in the STEM workforce, it said. Gender gaps in STEM employment in the Asia-Pacific region were also seen in Australia (21%), Singapore (15%) and India, with the smallest gap at 5%.

“As STEM roles are among the fastest growing and most in demand, professionals will likely be more resilient to economic pressures,” LinkedIn said. “With the increasing importance of STEM to the global economy, it is imperative to take steps toward leveling the playing field for women to ensure they will benefit from industry advancements.”

The social media site said women in STEM all over the world are graduating but not staying in the field. While they graduate with STEM degrees, fewer are entering the STEM workforce.

The sharpest drop in female representation (7 points) happens between graduation and entering the STEM workforce, which only decreases as they start climbing the leadership ladder.

LinkedIn noted that in the Philippines, four of 10 STEM graduates (41%) in 2017 were women, but only slightly more than 3 of 10 (36.6%) were in the STEM workforce a year later.

“The drop in representation between graduation and joining the workforce has been stable at around 11% from the 2017 graduating batch, but it spiked to 14% in 2021,” it added.

Linked In also said the lack of female role models in the field contributes to the drop-off of women working in the STEM industry.

LinkedIn data showed that in countries where the decline in female representation from graduation to joining the STEM workforce was less significant, the disparity between men and women in STEM jobs tended to be minor.

The average drop-off in female representation between graduation and entering the STEM workforce in Singapore (8%), India (4%) and Italy (10%) were smaller, which resulted in negligible gender gaps in STEM jobs at 15%, 5%, and 12% respectively.

Countries like the Philippines (14%), Australia (17%) and the US (20%) showed higher dips in female representation after graduation, resulting in wider gender gaps in STEM employment at 22%, 21% and 22%, respectively, LinkedIn said.

The Global Gender Gap report and LinkedIn’s data showed that systemic change is needed to make workplaces more fair and equal to future-proof women’s careers and be more resilient to labor market uncertainty.

“While action is already being taken to close the gender gap, we need to go further and faster to level the playing field,” Atul Harkisanka, LinkedIn head of Emerging Markets and country manager for the Philippines, said in the statement.

“Enabling more women to enter and advance in rapidly growing sectors such as STEM will help make them more resilient to external economic shocks,” she added.

The World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report for 2023 that showed women made up 29% of the global STEM workforce, with eight in 10 leadership roles being filled by men.

The country placed 16th out of 146 countries in the report that measured gender parity in economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival and political empowerment.

Last week, International Labour Organization Director-General Gilbert F. Houngbo said the Philippine government should ensure that men and women should be afforded equal pay and employment opportunities.

“Eliminating gender-related bias will be essential for the human-centered, just and sustainable future of work that we are talking of,” he said in his speech at the National Conference of Employers in the Philippines on June 29.

“This means promoting inclusive policies and practices, and providing equal access to education, training and job opportunities.” — John Victor D. Ordoñez

Philippine lawmakers score Chinese harassment at sea 

AN AERIAL VIEW of the BRP Sierra Madre at the contested Second Thomas Shoal on March 9, 2023. — REUTERS

PHILIPPINE senators on Tuesday condemned China’s reported harassment of two Philippine ships on a resupply mission on June 30, and urged the government of President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. to seek legal remedies. 

“China is reckless and irresponsible,” Senator Ana Theresia “Risa” N. Hontiveros-Baraquel said in a statement. “Her continued attempts to illegally occupy our territories only demonstrate her complete disrespect of international law.” 

Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) vessels BRP Malabrigo and BRP Malapascua were escorting a small boat on a resupply mission to the Philippine Navy ship BRP Sierra Madre when they encountered “an armada” of Chinese Coast Guard militia, tweeted Raymond Powell, a fellow at the Gordian Knot Center for National Security Innovation. 

“After the resupply, the two Chinese Coast Guard ships pursued the PCG ships to the east,” the former US Air Force official said.” 

The PCG had yet to confirm the incident. 

The Philippines deliberately had BRP Sierra Madre run aground on Second Thomas Shoal in the Spratly Islands in 1999 to serve as an outpost of the Philippine Marine Corps to assert Philippine sovereignty in the South China Sea. 

Ms. Hontiveros said it is crucial for the government to raise the South China Sea issue to the United Nations General Assembly. “I hope that the Senate can tackle my resolution regarding this as soon as session resumes, as we need the support of the wider international community to stop China’s unbridled aggression.” 

Senator Jinggoy Estrada in a separate statement said “repeated provocations” by Chinese vessels are unacceptable and violate international law. 

“I urge the concerned agencies to pursue all available legal and diplomatic avenues to address this issue and seek appropriate remedies,” he said. “Diplomatic channels should be utilized to convey our strong condemnation and demand for an immediate halt to these aggressive actions.” 

Also on Tuesday, Ms. Hontiveros-Baraquel, Mr. Estrada and Senator Francis N. Tolentino weighed in on the newly released Hollywood movie Barbie, which showed China’s nine-dash line map. 

“The movie is fiction, and so is the nine-dash line,” Ms. Hontiveros-Baraquel said. “At the minimum, our cinemas should include an explicit disclaimer that the nine-dash line is a figment of China’s imagination.” 

Mr. Estrada said he wouldn’t be surprised if the movie gets banned in the Philippines. “It may be a work of fiction but still, this is a very sensitive issue,” he said. 

“It is contrary to our national interest and China has no historic rights in the waters within the nine-dash line. No less than the arbitral tribunal already held in 2016 that this infamous line has no legal basis,” he added. 

Mr. Tolentino said the movie “denigrates Philippine sovereignty” and should be banned. 

Vietnam, one of the claimants in the South China Sea, has banned the movie, according to the BBC. — Norman P. Aquino and Jan Jiminel Cacdac 

Marcos approves lifting of COVID emergency 

PHILIPPINE President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. Has approved the lifting of public health emergency status due to the coronavirus, according to the Department of Health (DoH). 

He would issue an order soon, Health Secretary Teodoro “Ted” J. Herbosa told reporters on the sidelines of a palace briefing. “If that (executive order) is not yet signed, I will follow it up with reiteration.” 

The Health chief said an inter-agency task force had been hesitant to recommend the lifting of the emergency status since bivalent vaccines against the coronavirus were still being distributed. 

“That obstacle is gone since the vaccines have a certificate of product registration now and everything,” Mr. Herbosa said. 

The World Health Organization in May said the coronavirus was no longer a global health emergency. The Philippines posted 2,747 COVID-19 cases on June 19 to 25, with the daily average falling by 20% to 392 from a week earlier. 

Meanwhile, Mr. Marcos Jr. has ordered the Justice department to investigate the alleged hoarding, smuggling and price-fixing of agricultural products including onion after lawmakers raised the concern to him, the presidential palace said in a statement.  

The House of Representatives agriculture committee in May pointed to a group of companies that manipulated the prices of onion, which hit P700 per kilo last year. — John Victor D. Ordoñez 

DoH to solve logistical snags in delivery of TB medication

HEALTH Secretary Teodoro J. Herbosa at a press briefing on July 3, 2023. — PHILIPPINE STAR/KRIZ JOHN ROSALES

THE DEPARTMENT of Health (DoH) on Tuesday said it plans on improving the delivery of tuberculosis (TB) medicine to local hospitals after President Ferdinand R. Marcos, Jr. ordered the agency to prevent and lessen cases of the pulmonary disease.

“We do not lack the medicine for tuberculosis,” Health Secretary Teodoro J. Herbosa told a Palace briefing after a Cabinet meeting.

“Sometimes, they’re just in the warehouse and not delivered to the clinic and I think it can be solved simply with some logistics experts making sure the drugs are delivered.”

The Health secretary reiterated his agency’s plan to shorten the treatment plan for tuberculosis to four months from six months by the third quarter of the year based on a recommendation by the World Health Organization (WHO).

WHO has recommended for us to adopt the four-month treatment for regimenwhich is two months of a certain list of drugs, and another two months of another set of drugs,he said in another briefing on Monday.

The DoH will also use new technologies such as artificial intelligence to detect the disease quicker, he said.

CLARK HOSPITAL
Mr. Herbosa also announced that the DoH is set to launch a multi-specialty treatment center in Clark, Pampanga on July 17.

The medical facility will be built with government funds and donations from the private sector.

He said the facility will start out as a 100-bed general hospital and will eventually be expanded as a heart-specialty center.

The government plans to continue building more regional hospitals this year and to train more trauma surgeons for local treatment centers, he said as he cited the contributions and assistance extended by the private sector.

“So, were harnessing the private sector thats been very I‘d like to commend the private sector for helping me out in the goals for implementing the health outcomes, he said.

“So, the government alone cannot do it, the private sector has a big role in improving our health services and the specialty services as well.” John Victor D. Ordoñez