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PVL Invitational kicks off on July 9 at Filoil Arena

PREMIER Volleyball League team captains — PVL

THE Premier Volleyball League (PVL) will hope to ride the momentum of its record-performance in its Open Conference early this year as it stages the PVL Invitational unfurling on July 9 at the Filoil Flying V Arena.

“We hope to sustain the momentum we gained in the Open Conference,” said PVL president Ricky Palou during Tuesday’s face-to-face Philippine Sportswriters Association Forum at the Century Park, Manila.

The country’s only professional volleyball league drew record crowd particularly in the playoff stage where all the venues they played for were either packed or near capacity.

The highest attendance in its history came in Game Two of the semifinal showdown between sibling rivals Creamline and Choco Mucho at the MOA Arena where 16,687 paying patrons graced the epic duel.

And that is the reason the league is bringing the Creamline-Choco Mucho elimination round game back to the MOA Arena on July 23 as well as the rest of its semifinals and finals games there.

“We’ve had problems last conference. That’s why we’re bringing the PVL to bigger venues during its crucial games,” said PVL commissioner Tonyboy Liao.

Open Conference third-placer Cignal HD and Army Black Mamba open up hostilities as the two collide at 2:30 p.m., followed by the duel between Choco Mucho and 2021 champion Chery Tiggo at 5:30 p.m.

Other teams also seeing action are PLDT and Petro Gazz while Japan’s Kobe Shinwa University and Chinese Taipei’s King Whale are the guest squads who will play straight in the round-robin semis.

Games will be aired live on One Sports (free-to-air Ch 41 and Cignal Ch 6) and One Sports+ (Cignal Ch 91 SD, Ch 261 HD) with both channels also available on Cignal’s OTT Platform, Cignal Play, with video on demand also available on the platform.

Matches will also be streamed on social media application KUMU and on the league’s official website pvl.ph. Livestream of the games will also be accessible on Smart GigaPlay, a platform exclusively for Smart subscribers. — Joey Villar

RCBC planning to borrow P200B under new bond and commercial paper program

RIZAL COMMERCIAL Banking Corp. (RCBC) has approved a P200-billion bond and commercial paper program to raise funds for its operations.

RCBC’s board of directors approved at a regular meeting held on June 27 the issuance of up to P200 billion in notes under its new peso-denominated bond and commercial paper program, the bank said in a disclosure to the stock exchange on Tuesday.

This new program is bigger than the P100-billion plan approved by its board in 2019. Proceeds from the fundraising exercises under the earlier program were used to support asset growth, refinance maturing liabilities and other general funding purposes in line with RCBC’s sustainable finance framework, the bank earlier said.

The latest issuance out the P100-billion plan was made in February, as the bank raised P14.75 billion via its offer of 2.25-year ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) sustainability bonds.

RCBC’s net income jumped by 36% to P2.1 billion in the first quarter as its core businesses continued to grow.

In 2021, the bank booked a five-year-high net income of P7.083 billion, up by 41.1% from the P5.02 billion posted in 2020, following the better performance of its core businesses and the normalization of its loan loss provisions.

The Yuchengco-led lender’s shares closed unchanged at P19.50 apiece on Tuesday. — KBT

Art News Around The World (06/29/22)

WORKERS clean a restored Roman-era mosaic after it was put on display at its original site in Lod, now an Israeli city where an archaeological center has been inaugurated, Israel, June 27. — REUTERS/ AMIR COHEN

Magnificent ancient mosaic found near Tel Aviv returns home

LOD, Israel — An exceptionally well-preserved Roman floor mosaic, showing a rich variety of fish, animals, birds and ships, has returned to the site where it was first found in a Tel Aviv suburb after a decade-long tour of some of the world’s top museums.

The 1,700-year-old mosaic, from the late Roman period, was discovered in 1996 during highway construction work, but was not put on display until 2009, when sufficient funding to preserve it was donated.

The colorful mosaic, 17 meters (55 feet) long and about 9 meters (29 feet) wide, may have served as the foyer floor of a mansion in a wealthy neighborhood of Lod, near what is now Tel Aviv, the Israel antiquities Authority said in a statement.

“The owner was probably a very rich merchant because he travelled throughout the world and he saw things, like all the ships and the fish on display in the mosaic,” said archaeologist Hagit Torge from the Israel Antiquities Authority.

The design of the mosaic was influenced by North African mosaics and lacks any depiction of people, suggesting it may have belonged to a Christian or a Jew who wanted to avoid pagan attributes such as depiction of Roman gods, said archaeologist Amir Gorzalczany from the Israel Antiquities Authority. The mosaic will now be exhibited at an archaeological center built where it was found, in Lod. —  Reuters

HK Palace Museum aims to engage city’s youth with Chinese culture

HONG KONG — Hong Kong’s (HK) new Palace Museum, a gift from Beijing to mark the 25th anniversary of the territory’s return to Chinese rule, aims to engage the city’s younger generation with Chinese culture, its director said on Wednesday.

Spanning more than 30,000 square meters, the museum showcases more than 900 artefacts on loan from Beijing’s Palace Museum in the Forbidden City, including portraits from the Qing dynasty, calligraphy, and ceramics.

Of those, 166 works are considered “national treasures.”

“We need to promote the transmission and dissemination of Chinese culture,” museum director Louis Ng said ahead of the museum’s opening on July 2, a day after Hong Kong marks the anniversary of its handover from British to Chinese rule. “Especially for young people, we need to give them more opportunities to understand and appreciate Chinese culture.”

The museum sparked controversy when plans were unveiled in 2016, with critics saying there was a lack of transparency over the multibillion-dollar project and that it was presented as a done deal without public consultation.

A consultation period followed after the deal was announced.

Among the highlights at the museum, which comprises nine galleries, are paintings from the Tang and Song dynasties.

Funded by a HK$3.5-billion ($446 million) donation from the Hong Kong Jockey Club, the museum next to the Kowloon waterfront will also exhibit 13 pieces on loan from the Louvre Museum in Paris. — Reuters

In Italy, a glimmer of resurrection for art damaged in 2016 quakes

SAN SEVERINO MARCHE, Italy —  At the opening of a new museum in the picturesque Italian town of San Severino Marche, the guests of honor did not dress up. They were firemen in gear worn when they rescued artworks damaged in earthquakes in 2016 and now restored and on display.

The three main quakes, which hit central Italy between Aug. 24 and Oct. 30, 2016, killed more than 300 people and caused extensive destruction to homes, churches and museums.

Six years on, some of the recovered art has found a permanent home. Other pieces are waiting to go back to their rebuilt churches or be relocated.

In the Archdiocese of Camerino and San Severino Marche in the Marche region, 1,970 works of art were damaged, about half of them seriously. In bordering Umbria, thousands more were damaged when small churches and large basilicas crumbled.

“Art can be an inspiration for reconstruction, joy and hope,” Francesco Massera, archbishop of Camerino and San Severino Marche, said at the recent opening of the museum.

Its name, Museo dell’Arte Recuperata (Museum of Recovered Art), conveys the passage from sickness to health

“I feel like I am in a field hospital where survivors are treated until they are well,” said prominent Italian art critic Vittorio Sgarbi.

Some of the restored works are displayed next to photographs or videos showing dust-covered firemen rescuing them from the ruins.

EARTHQUAKE-PROOF ART ‘HOSPITAL’
AFTER a 1997 quake hit Umbria, damaging the Basilica of St. Francis in Assisi, the regional government decided to prepare for the next big one.

Since 2006, an industrial area outside Spoleto has been home to Italy’s first purpose-built facility to receive and restore art damaged in earthquakes.

The huge earthquake-proof elastic building with cutting edge technology is divided into hermetic sectors holding thousands of works of art.

The first, an emergency receiving area, is large enough for trucks to enter and unload. Huge vacuum tubes hanging from the ceiling remove dust.

The other sectors are individually climate-controled for each purpose — preventing further damage or deterioration, restoration, and storage while awaiting discharge.

The mesmerizing array of paintings, frescoes, statues, chalices, candelabra, vestments, reliquaries and ornate wooden crucifixes can be overwhelming for the visitor. Outside, dozens of church bells are lined up like sentries.

“It is very important to see the overall picture and that includes regular maintenance,” said art historian Giovanni Luca Delogu, 55, the Spoleto facility’s director.

“You can’t just intervene when there are tragedies like earthquakes. Some pieces already were in bad condition. Art needs constant care,” he said, walking amid hundreds of chunks of the shattered Church of San Salvatore in Campi, parts of which dated back to the 12th century.

The chunks, many with parts of frescoes still attached, have been sorted, tagged and assembled like puzzle pieces. They rest next to photographs of sections taken before the quakes.

The church’s two rose windows and an intricately carved stone screen panel that once joined the sides of an arch have been pieced together.

St. Benedict’s Basilica in nearby Norcia, the crown jewel of medieval architecture in Umbria’s Nera River Valley and a major tourist draw, is being rebuilt.

But the fate of smaller gems like San Salvatore in Campi or Santa Maria della Pieta in Preci is unclear.

Mr. Delogu allows parish groups into the depository to see the statues they once prayed before. Some are lent to towns for religious events of deep local pride, such as processions on the feast day of a patron saint.

“Even an earthquake cannot rupture some bonds,” he said. — Reuters

AstraZeneca, MedAsia partner for early detection of chronic kidney disease

ASTRAZENECA Philippines and MedAsia Medical Products Corp. have signed on June 24 an agreement to broaden access to urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (uACR) machines, which detect how much albumin is present in the urine.   

Albumin, a protein found in the blood, can be an early sign of chronic kidney disease (CKD) if there is more than 30 mg/g of it in a patient’s urine.  

The uACR test, which can be done in doctors’ offices, hospitals, or diagnostic clinics, requires a lab sample of about two tablespoons of urine, and may be taken once a year.  

“CKD is highly underdiagnosed,” MedAsia general manager Oliver L. Lim said in a statement. “Now that our uACR machines are more accessible to patients, we are committed to helping AstraZeneca Philippines and the medical community in addressing the root of the problem.”   

In the same press release, Jo Feng, senior vice-president of AstraZeneca Asia Area, said, “By working in partnership throughout the entire patient care pathway, I hope we can tangibly improve CKD patient outcomes and support our healthcare systems for many years to come.”  

“We plan to make it more available in the barrios and in the clinics of primary care physicians so they can test patients right away,” added Mr. Lim in a June 24 event organized by AstraZeneca Philippines.  

One Filipino develops CKD every 40 minutes, per the National Kidney and Transplant Institute. CKD was the fourth leading cause of death in the Philippines in 2019, up from the sixth leading cause a decade earlier.   

About 59.3% of CKD patients worldwide are undiagnosed because they develop symptoms of kidney disease late into the disease, said Dr. Elizabeth Lapid-Roasa, a consultant of both the University of Santo Tomas Hospital and St. Luke’s Medical Center Global City.   

Symptoms such as swollen feet and shortness of breath happen usually at stages 4 or 5 — “when you’re almost needing dialysis or requiring a transplant already,” Dr. Roasa said. The second reason for the underdiagnosis is because people are not aware of their potential to become sick, she added.   

Patients with diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, and high cholesterol are at risk for CKD. So are those who smoke and are obese.  

The term CKD refers to a conglomerate of diseases, according to Dr. Nickson E. Austria, head nephrologist of Calamba Medical Center. While certain types may manifest early in life, others don’t, hence the importance of early screening.   

He added that bad lifestyle habits can make children more susceptible to CKD since parents influence how they eat and how active they are. 

June is National Kidney Month. — Patricia B. Mirasol 

 


Remote work is a boon to chronic kidney disease patients  

WORKING from home is a boon to chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients, according to the founder of a support group for patients with end-stage renal disease.  

“I work as a virtual assistant now,” said Reynaldo S. Abacan, Jr., founder and president of Dialysis PH Support Group, Inc., on the sidelines of a June 24 event organized by AstraZeneca Philippines. He added that many patients have similar remote jobs, such as online selling, that have flexible working hours. 

Using public transport is another major deterrent to office work, Mr. Abacan added in the vernacular, because CKD patients run out of breath while going up and down flights of stairs.  

Traveling out of town, meanwhile, entails securing medical clearance beforehand, as well as contacting a dialysis center in case an emergency dialysis session is needed on location.  

Nutrition also gets a boost from the work-from-home setup. “Once you eat out, your choices are … fast food, milk tea,” he said in the vernacular.  

Mr. Abacan, who does not have a family history of CKD, had glomerulonephritis, a type of CKD, as a child. He went undiagnosed until he was 20, when the disease was at stage 5.   

He told BusinessWorld what added to the burden on his kidneys was his fondness for chips and soda.  

“A bottle of Mountain Dew has a lot of tablespoons of sugar,” said Dr. Nickson E. Austria, head nephrologist of Calamba Medical Center. Dr. Austria also noted that all types of salt are still salt: “They’re all sodium chloride. Even Himalayan salt; it’s only pink because it has traces of certain minerals.”  

Dr. Elizabeth Lapid-Roasa, a consultant of both the University of Santo Tomas Hospital and St. Luke’s Medical Center Global City, advised being a discriminating consumer.  

“Instant noodles are culprits here. If you look at the sodium content, it’s more than the daily requirement already,” she said. She suggested workarounds for those on a tight budget, including adding vegetables like chopped carrots, not using all the seasoning that comes with the instant noodle packet, or replacing seasoning with herbs. 

Dialysis PH promotes CKD awareness, and also assists patients on the procedures for seeking government and private sector assistance to fund their medical expenses.  

“CKD changed the course of my life,” said Mr. Abacan in the vernacular. 

CKD is characterized by a gradual loss of kidney function over a period of time. Because the kidneys have been damaged, waste builds up in the body, and in turn causes other health problems. Symptoms in the late stages include swelling of the feet and ankles, shortness of breath, and fatigue and weakness. — Patricia B. Mirasol 

Megawide: Anti-dummy case vs officials dismissed due to amended PSA

MEGAWIDE Construction Corp. said on Tuesday that a court in Cebu had dismissed the criminal case filed against its officials for the alleged violation of the Anti-Dummy Law in connection with the operation of the Mactan-Cebu International Airport (MCIA).

“We received today, June 27, 2022, from the Regional Trial Court of Lapu-Lapu City, Branch 68, the Omnibus Order dated June 14, 2022, dismissing the criminal case” against the company’s officials in their capacity as directors of the GMR Megawide Cebu Airport Corp. (GMCAC), operator of MCIA, it said in a disclosure to the stock exchange.

Megawide officials involved in the case include Manuel Louie B. Ferrer, executive director for infrastructure development and chief corporate affairs and branding officer; Jez G. Dela Cruz, vice-president for corporate finance and planning; Edgar B. Saavedra, chief executive officer and president; and Oliver Y. Tan, director.

“The dismissal of the case was necessitated by the enactment of Republic Act No. 11659 (amended Public Service Act or PSA), signed into law last March 21, 2022, which clearly excluded airport operations and maintenance from the definition of a public utility; thereby, removing the applicability of the nationality restriction to GMCAC in operating the Mactan Cebu International Airport,” it said.

The company noted that the amended PSA has “completely eradicated any alleged violation of the Anti-Dummy Law.”

The newly signed law “applies to the Megawide respondents due to [its] retroactive effect,” it added.

In March, the company said that the officials involved had filed a motion to quash the case, citing the amended PSA.

According to the company, a joint resolution issued by the Office of the Ombudsman in July last year “found probable cause” against its directors and officers, who are also directors of GMCAC, “who all allegedly acted in conspiracy with one another, for violation of Section 3(e) of Republic Act No. 3019 or the Anti-Graft and Corrupt Practices Act.”

“The respondents allegedly acted with a common purpose and intention to allow foreign nationals to perform executive functions, particularly to manage and operate the Mactan Cebu International Airport in violation of the Anti-Dummy Law,” Megawide said, referring to the Office of the Ombudsman’s joint resolution.

The company maintained that it complies “with all the applicable laws, rules, and regulations covering the Concession Agreement for MCIA, and the government’s Public-Private Partnership program, since the project was officially awarded to the Megawide-GMR consortium in 2014.” — Arjay L. Balinbin

Meralco-PEDC power supply deal gets provisional approval

MANILA Electric Co. (Meralco) and Panay Energy Development Corp. (PEDC) have secured provisional regulatory approval for their power supply agreement for 70 megawatts (MW) to augment the electricity provider’s requirements for this year and the succeeding years.

In its order promulgated on July 27, 2022, the Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC) said it had verified the capacity covered in the agreement and found it “consistent” with Meralco’s 2022-2030 power supply procurement plan.

“Even with the 70 MW capacity procured by [Meralco], it still expects a power supply deficit equivalent to 792 MW in the year 2022. Thus, the procurement of new power supply through [a] bilateral contract in order to ensure continuous and reliable electricity for [its] customers is justified,” the regulator said.

It added that not addressing the deficit in a timely manner will expose the utility company’s consumers to the volatility of prices in the electricity spot market, which averaged at P5.21 per kilowatt-hour (kWh) in 2021.

The 15-year power supply agreement (PSA) had been forged after Meralco initiated a competitive selection process in which PEDC emerged as the winning bidder.

The provisional authority given to the contracting parties’ PSA is subject to conditions and modifications.

The application rates will be at P3.1079 per kWh at the minimum energy off-take at 75% plant capacity factor, and P2.3309 per kWh at 100% plant capacity factor, regardless of source.

The rates are subject to escalation as set in the applicants’ PSA. The commission has disallowed the renewal of the agreement.

“PEDC shall deliver the contracted capacity at all times, regardless of its source, subject to the rates and the terms as provisionally approved herein,” the ERC said.

It also said that in the event that the final rate is lower than that provisionally granted, the amount corresponding to the reduction will be refunded by PEDC to Meralco, which will credit the same to the electric bills of consumers.

Meralco’s controlling stakeholder, Beacon Electric Asset Holdings, Inc., is partly owned by PLDT, Inc. Hastings Holdings, Inc., a unit of PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund subsidiary MediaQuest Holdings, Inc., has interest in BusinessWorld through the Philippine Star Group, which it controls. — VVS

Metro Manila’s construction materials wholesale price index

WHOLESALE PRICES of building materials in Metro Manila jumped to their highest in more than a decade in May as construction activities resumed amid decreasing coronavirus infections. Read the full story.

Metro Manila's construction materials wholesale price index

UnionBank looking to launch digital lender by next month

BW FILE PHOTO
UNIONBANK of the Philippines, Inc. expects to launch its digital lender, Union Digital Bank, by next month. — BW FILE PHOTO

UNIONBANK of the Philippines, Inc. targets to launch its digital bank in the second half of the year.

“We would like to clarify a recent statement made regarding the launch of UnionDigital. We are ensuring an amazing experience for our customers with ongoing due diligence. UnionDigital is targeted to launch in the 3rd or 4th quarter of this year,” the bank said in an email on Friday.

UnionBank’s First Vice President and Head of Fintech Group Erika Dizon-Go had said in a briefing last week that Union Digital Bank is targeted to be launched this month.

“We are hoping it would be a big contributor to the main bank as well,” she added.

UnionDigital was given a digital banking license by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas in July 2021.

Digital banks are expected to help the central bank reach its goal to bring 70% of Filipino adults into the banked population and have 50% of payments done online by 2023.

During an online briefing, Ms. Go said open finance will also help the banks reach more unserved individuals.

“Aside from the infrastructure and connectivity, aside from the rules and regulations that they have set for the market players, it’s also showing the people that open banking and open finance is here, … not just to serve the financial institutions, but it’s here to serve the general population so that they become a part of the financial workplace,” she said.

Ms. Go said through open finance platforms that enable interoperability, over one million of UnionBank’s clients have been able to link their accounts to e-wallets and e-commerce platforms.

“What we did was that we partnered with counters so that you can still receive funds even if you’re in far-flung areas [using] a UnionBank account. You get the cash in these counters instead where there are more widespread locations,” she said.

“This movement is definitely the next step, but as I mentioned earlier, we are not going to leave anyone behind. There are still (people) who feel better with passbooks and paper transactions. We completely understand that that demographic will still continue,” Ms. Go added. “But slowly, I think the system or the space will transform, maybe not immediately but in the next decade. And that’s what we are preparing for.”

She said the bank hopes to increase its digital banking clients to two million from one million currently through open finance.

The official added that the bank hopes to further expand its open finance and digital banking services, such as allowing clients to link their accounts with investment companies or stock brokerages for easier investing.

The Aboitiz-led lender’s net income dropped by 45% to P2.608 billion in the first three months of the year.

UnionBank’s shares closed unchanged at P76.50 apiece on Tuesday. — K.B. Ta-asan

SEAG gold medalist seeks help for her Olympic dream

SEAG fencing gold medalist Samantha Catantan — SAMANTHA CATANTAN FB PAGE

SOUTHEAST Asian Games (SEAG) fencing gold medalist Samantha Catantan is dreaming the Olympic dream.

But she would need help.

“We’re asking, looking for help. This is big for fencing because of the ranking points we can earn in the tournament,” said the 20-year-old Ms. Catantan, a US NCAA Division I Penn State standout who came close to making the Tokyo Olympics last year.

The country’s top women’s foil fencer is specifically asking for assistance to fund her campaign in the World Fencing Championships slated for July 15 to 23 in Cairo, Egypt after her fund request has yet to get a response due to the transition leadership period in the Philippine Sports Commission (PSC).

“If it was approved, we’ll not reach out for help because it’ll be funded by the government (PSC),” said Ms. Catantan, who delivered the country its only gold in the Hanoi Games.

“But we understand the situation of the PSC,” she added.

Ms. Catantan said she is eyeing to earn a ticket in the Paris Olympics by gaining points through the World Championships, World Cups, Asian Championships and other regional events.

In the Asian Championships last June 10 to 15, Ms. Catantan finished 13th overall in women’s foil event.

“If I’ll not join the tournament, sayang naman po ‘yung points that I got in the AFC,” said Ms. Catantan, who is hoping to raise $3,000 to be able to join World Championships — or approximately P156,000.

“That’s why I’m asking for help. I know there are private companies that love sports… that they have not just a soft spot, but the heart to help Filipino athletes like me — dreaming of becoming an Olympian,” she added. — Joey Villar

Focus on sustainable healthcare

@EVRMCOFFICIAL

The Philippines logged an average of 662 coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases per day from June 20 to 26, the Department of Health said on Monday, fueling calls for renewed vigilance against the virus. This tally is 53% higher than the number of infections reported from June 13 to June 19.  

The COVID-19 pandemic has emphasized the need for a strengthened healthcare system, where all health pillars from governance, human resources, financing, medicines, information, and service delivery are efficiently working to provide quality patient care in the time of need. 

With this, the PHAPCares Foundation will push sustainable healthcare initiatives in cities as well as in Geographically Isolated and Disadvantaged Areas (GIDAs). PHAPCares, the social responsibility arm of the Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Association of the Philippines (PHAP), will focus on three key program areas: sustainable healthcare, access to medicines and emergency response, and social development. 

Under the sustainable healthcare program, the group will put in place healthcare services in communities in both urban and rural settings. The goal is to empower more communities to improve health outcomes and increase the productivity of people living there. 

Assuming the PHAPCares leadership is Lotis Ramin, who succeeds Boehringer Ingelheim general manager Yee Kok Cheong as Foundation President. 

Following the global battle against COVID-19, Ms. Ramin recognized the urgency to reinforce well-functioning and sustainable healthcare systems. Apart from the pandemic, communities are challenged by other health threats such as non-communicable and other infectious diseases. 

As part of the whole-of-society approach, the Foundation will collaborate more with the national and local governments, and with other partners to establish model cities and communities that reflect the Universal Health Care (UHC) aspiration.  

UHC in the country, as defined, is a healthcare model which provides all Filipinos access to a set of quality and cost-effective health services without causing financial hardship. It also prioritizes communities or groups that do not have access to such quality services. 

The deliberate focus on sustainable healthcare will also be spearheaded by PHAPCares officers namely Novartis Healthcare country president and managing director Jugo Tsumura (vice-president) and Abbott Philippines general manager Melissa Ellen Belvis (treasurer).  

Joining Yee Kok Cheong as trustees are Bayer Philippines managing director and country division head Angel Michael Evangelista, Zuellig Pharma Philippines market managing director Jannette Jakosalem, Takeda Healthcare country manager Loreann Villanueva, PHAPCares executive director Dr. Maria Rosarita Quijano-Siasoco, and Dr. Corazon Maglaya (honorary trustee). 

At the height of the pandemic, PHAPCares launched a campaign to strengthen the country’s healthcare system capacity, and protect healthcare workers.  

PHAP members provided personal protective equipment (PPE), test kits, ventilators, medicines, and food packs to health frontliners and communities affected by the pandemic. They also made an initial donation of P120 million, benefiting at least 155 health facilities nationwide. 

One of the ways to achieve sustainable healthcare in communities is through disaster preparedness. 

PHAPCares will continue to strengthen access to medicines and emergency response by donating medicines to communities and institutions in times of disasters.  

Under emergency response, it will again conduct training under the Earthquake, Landslide, Search and Rescue Orientation Course (ELSAROC) through a partnership with the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA).  

As of today, 564 individuals from 26 pharmaceutical companies, local government units, non-government organizations, and academic institutions have trained under ELSAROC. These individuals have been trained to serve as rescuers, specifically in extricating and caring for victims that may be trapped under collapsed structures. 

Established in 2003, the PHAPCares Foundation has received a number of recognitions, including a Presidential Citation for its training and employment program for community nurses. The nurses were deployed in GIDA communities, providing needed healthcare support in far-flung areas. 

The organization has donated at least P1 billion worth of medicines to communities disadvantaged by sickness, poverty, conflicts, and calamities.

 

Teodoro B. Padilla is the executive director of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Association of the Philippines (PHAP), which represents the biopharmaceutical medicines and vaccines industry in the country. Its members are at the forefront of research and development efforts for COVID-19 and other diseases that affect Filipinos.

Arts & Culture (06/29/22)

CCP pays tribute to the 2022 National Artists

A TRIBUTE will be given to eight exemplary personalities who were proclaimed National Artists, at the Cultural Center of the Philippines’ (CCP) Main Theater today, June 29, at 5 p.m. Tickets for the public will be given starting 3 p.m. at the CCP Ramp. The newly declared National Artists are choreographer, director, and teacher Agnes Locsin (Dance); the late terno innovator Salvacion “Slim” Lim-Higgins (Fashion Design); the late film and television director and screenwriter Marilou Diaz-Abaya (Film and Broadcast Arts); screenwriter, journalist, playwright, teacher, and fictionist Ricardo “Ricky” Lee (Film and Broadcast Arts); actress and singer Nora Cabaltera Villamayor aka Nora Aunor (Film); poet, writer, critic, scholar, literary historian, and anthologist Gemino Abad (Literature); opera singer and teacher Fides Cuyugan-Asensio (Music); and theater director, actor, and teacher Antonio “Tony” Mabesa (Theater). President Rodrigo R. Duterte conferred the Order of National Artist on them in a ceremony on June 16 at Malacañang. They were declared the new National Artists by virtue of Presidential Proclamation no. 1390 signed on June 10.

Ortigas Library exhibits vintage photos of Cordilleras

THE ORTIGAS Library will be holding an exhibition of vintage photographs called “People and Places: A Cordillera Legacy — Photographs from 1900-1925,” at the Baguio Convention & Cultural Center, Baguio City, from July 13 to Aug. 28. Admission is free. Many of these photos, from the Ortigas Library collection and its Library consultant Jonathan Best as well as several other collectors, are rarely seen images of the Cordillera people, their surroundings, architecture, from Abra in the north to Benguet province in the south. 

Exhibit marks Saturday Group’s 54th year

“THE SATURDAY GROUP AT 54” is a group exhibition marking the 54th year of The Saturday Group of Artists. It will be on view from July 2 to 15 at the ArtistSpace, Ayala Museum Annex, Makati Ave. corner De La Rosa St., Greenbelt Park, Makati City. The gallery is open daily from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Admission is free. The exhibit features works by the present generation of The Saturday Group of Artists. The Saturday Group, founded in 1968, has been home to over 100 artists over the years with many illustrious names being part of its rich history.

Punk Zappa drops Eraserheads NFT Collection

ERASERHEADS guitarist Marcus Adoro launched the “Punk Zappa NFT Gallery — The Art of Marcus Adoro” on June 23 at Tago Jazz Bar in Quezon City. Mr. Adoro, who also goes by the name Punk Zappa, ventured into the analog-meets-digital realm by transforming his paintings into one-of-a-kind digital collectible NFTs (non-fungible tokens). His artworks were showcased at the NFT launch, such as that of the Abbey Road-inspired Eheads paintings. The first 20 pieces that were dropped are digitized versions of the Eheads calendar sets that Mr. Adoro released earlier this year. Buyers earn exclusive access to limited-edition perks and merchandise. To see Punk Zappa’s NFT collection, go to punkzappa.com. The Punk Zappa NFT Art Gallery is a project of GIGILx, the metaverse affiliate of GIGIL, an independent ad agency.

ARTipolo holds benefit show for PARC Foundation

ROBINSONS Land’s ARTablado recently signed an agreement with PARC Foundation and ARTipolo to mount “ARTiPARC: Shades, Shapes, and Stories,” on view from July 1 to 15 at ARTablado in Level 3 of Robinsons Galleria. The show features the works of 75 artists, with each artist having his or her own distinctive style and artistic strategy. Using art as its platform, ARTipolo has been able to raise funds for various charitable and professional organizations such as Soroptimist International (Antipolo Chapter), Kiwanis Club of Antipolo, Hemophilia Association of the Philippines for Love and Service (Haplos), Philippine Bar Association (PBA) and partnered with local businesses such as Loreland Farm and Resort, Café Lupe, Luljehetas Hanging Garden, Casa Nieves, and Hotel LeBlanc, to name a few. The beneficiaries of these exhibits and auctions are mostly youth and children. ARTiPARC also benefits the PARC Foundation which transforms the lives of underprivileged youths through its flagship program billed as PARCaralan, a free artistic, life skills training program with character-building workshops, cultural immersion, and assistance in seeking career opportunities. Meanwhile, on view at ARTablado Antipolo until June 30 is “Kalinangan,” a group show celebrating the 40th year of Bigkis Sining Binangonan. “Kalinangan” features the works of the group which was formed in the summer of 1982 at the heart of Rizal Province, with each member given the freedom to define and express his or her identity in the subjective world of color “for art must record (the soul of) our time — for this generation (and the generations to come) to draw inspiration from.” Among the participating artists are Bong Anore, Jhune Bernardo, Marlon Constantino, Claudio Aramil, Jr., and Reynaldo Punelas.

Deadline for entries to art criticism tilt

THE DEADLINE for submission of entries for the Ateneo Art Awards — Purita Kalaw-Ledesma Prizes in Art Criticism is June. 30. The Ateneo Art Gallery and the Kalaw-Ledesma Foundation, Inc. are now in their final week of accepting entries for the Purita Kalaw-Ledesma Prizes in Art Criticism category. With the theme Fresh Winds and New Light: Forecasting Change,” the Purita Kalaw-Ledesma Prizes are open to essays that reflect on artworks, exhibitions, programs, projects, other creative expressions, and efforts that aim to imagine a better world. Read the complete mechanics in English and Filipino at the Vital Points website. Entries may be submitted at bit.ly/PKL2022Entry. For any inquiries, please email us at pkl.aag@ateneo.edu.

How PSEi member stocks performed — June 28, 2022

Here’s a quick glance at how PSEi stocks fared on Tuesday, June 28, 2022.