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PhilHealth far from ready to administer universal health care program

Bahala na si Batman.

Kahit si Superman paupuin mo dito, baka hindi niya kaya.” (Even if you put Superman in my place, he might not be able to cope with the task.) That is what General Ricardo Morales, president and chief executive officer of the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth), said as a way of explaining why the alleged irregularities in the state insurance firm cannot be fixed.

In reaction, Senate President Vicente Sotto III, who is leading the Senate investigation into the alleged corruption within PhilHealth, said in a tweet, “Tanggalin mo lahat ng corrupt, hindi kailangan si Superman!” (“Get rid of all the corrupt people, you don’t need Superman!”) PhilHealth is facing separate investigations on alleged corruption. The firm itself is investigating 20,000 cases of alleged fraudulent transactions involving P4.5 billion funds.

But even if you rid PhilHealth of corrupt officers and staff, there would still be tremendous wastage of funds due to incompetence and inefficiency on the part of the officers and staff. The operating system required by universal health care is too enormous and complex for PhilHealth to run as it does not have the competent and experienced people to operate such a system.

Then, there is the external factor of moral hazard. In health insurance, moral hazard occurs when the behavior of the insured person changes in a way that raises costs for the insurer since the insured party no longer bears the full costs of that behavior. In health insurance moral hazard is multiplied threefold as the professional and the healthcare facility may be parties to the misbehavior.

An example is the insured with a common cold asking a physician to recommend his hospital confinement. The insured gets a valid excuse for absence from work or school, the professional and the owner of the facility are paid by the insurer for their token care.

With 38 million indigents enrolled in PhilHealth, moral hazard takes on greater magnitude. Faked hospital confinement means free meals and a real bed for the indigent enrollee and revenue for the healthcare providers.

In a way, General Morales is right. Superman as head of PhilHealth would not be able to cope with the task even if all the corrupt people from the highest echelons down to the rank-and-file were removed. Handling moral hazard is beyond Superman’s capability.

The population of the Philippines is 109 million. Under a universal health care scheme, all 109 million are insured by PhilHealth.

According to the Department of Health (DoH), the 10 leading causes of morbidity in 2010 were: acute respiratory infection 1,289,168; acute lower respiratory tract infection and pneumonia 586,186; bronchitis/bronchiolitis 351,126; hypertension 345,412; acute watery diarrhea 326,551; influenza 272,001; urinary tract infection 83,569; TB respiratory 72,516; injuries 51,201; and diseases of the heart 37,589.

Morbidity is defined as “any departure from a state of physiological or psychological well-being.” In plain language, morbidity means “disease, injury, and disability.”

The DoH does not show the morbidity caused by the diseases of the kidneys, intestines, liver, pancreas, reproductive organs, sense organs, nervous system, muscles, bones, blood, the newborn, complications of pregnancy, mental disorder, and many others. It can be validly assumed that the total morbidity caused by these diseases runs in the millions.

Anyway, for the 10 leading causes of morbidity, the total for the year 2010 is 3,415,319. The population in 2010 was 93,970,000 million. In 2019 it was 108,310,000. By simple projection the total morbidity in 2019 is estimated to be 3,927,616. That translates into 3,927,616 PhilHealth members filing claims for reimbursement. That is a formidable processing job.

Spread over 365 days, that is 10,760 incidents a day. Spread over the 30 offices of PhilHealth all over the country, it means each office is receiving 358 claims a day. Validating one claim properly requires examining several documents like the physician’s diagnosis and the hospital or laboratory’s bill. That could take at least eight minutes.

In an eight-hour working day, a claims processor (in the insurance business the term is adjuster) has 480 working minutes. That means she can process at most 60 claims a day out of the 358 she is probably given to process that day. That is not counting the claims for the diseases other than the leading ones. Yes, even Superman would find processing all those claims intimidating.

The Constitution of the World Health Organization (WHO) states that “The enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health is one of the fundamental rights of every human being without distinction of race, religion, political belief, economic or social condition.”

The right to health for all people means that everyone should have access to the health services they need, when and where they need them, without suffering financial hardship. No one should get sick and die just because he is poor.

In observance of the WHO declaration of healthcare for everyone, many countries launched universal health care programs. The Cuban government operates a national health system and assumes fiscal and administrative responsibility for the health care of all its 11.4 million citizens. There are no private hospitals or clinics as all health services are government-run.

In the United Kingdom, all aspects of medical services for all residents are covered by the National Health Service (NHS), which runs hospitals and pays doctors as employees. All medications associated with hospital visits are free of charge. The NHS is funded through taxation.

Many Filipinos migrating to another country choose Canada because its national health insurance system provides free care to all residents regardless of their ability to pay. The government keeps hospitals on a fixed budget to control costs, but reimburses doctors on a fee-for-service basis.

A country may have a basic level of universal health care. In reality though, the majority of its citizens still pay out of pocket for quality care or buy health insurance to defray the cost of appropriate standard of care.

In the ASEAN region, Singapore’s national health insurance plan, which is funded by payroll deductions and government subsidies, ensures its citizens affordable healthcare services.

Thailand’s universal healthcare scheme gives the members a gold card that they use to access services in their health district, and, if necessary, get referrals for specialist treatment elsewhere. The bulk of finance comes from public revenues.

On Feb. 20, 2019, President Rodrigo Duterte signed a Universal Health Care (UHC) Bill into law, Republic Act No. 11223. An Act Instituting Universal Health Care for All Filipinos, Prescribing Reforms in the Health Care System, and Appropriating Funds Therefor. The law automatically enrolled all Filipino citizens in the National Health Insurance Program, giving access to the full continuum of health services they need, while protecting them from enduring financial hardship as a result.

When implemented effectively, the Act will mean all Filipinos get the health care they need, when they need it, without suffering financial hardship as a result. However, there is much work to be done to implement the UHC Act.

PhilHealth, a government corporation attached to the DoH for policy coordination and guidance, was mandated to administer the National Health Insurance Program. This is the colossal weakness of the country’s universal healthcare system — PhilHealth administering the program.

PhilHealth is far from ready to manage such a massive and complex undertaking. First, it does not have people with formal training and substantial experience in health insurance to be able to formulate and promulgate policies for the sound administration of the program.

Morbidity rates are very important in health insurance. They are used in estimating the amount of funds to be set aside to cover benefits and claims for their customers. They are also used in determining the premium or price for its policies. It is obvious morbidity rates are not used by the people managing the funds.

The advancement payment of millions of pesos to a number of healthcare facilities is a reflection of the lack of competence in fund management and of knowledge of the concept of insurance. An insurance company generates additional funds by judicious placement of the enrollees’ aggregate fees in the money market. What the PhilHealth fund manager does is divert a large portion of the investable funds to non-interest earning placements.

Advance payment also goes against the cardinal principle of insurance — to compensate the insured for his loss. The insured person is paid only after he had incurred an expense.

The benefits set for each disease are unrealistic, making many sick Filipinos ruined financially.

Neither does PhilHealth have the required number of people with the technical know-how to validate the thousands of claims and thus ensure the proper use of the funds. There are many patients who were confined in the hospital for common cold but were paid an amount allotted for cases of pneumonia. That only means the processors of the claims are not knowledgeable of healthcare protocols.

In many countries universal health coverage is a political choice. It is in the Philippines. The legislators behind R.A. 11223 were motivated by political reasons. They rushed the formulation of the bill and pushed for its enactment into law in time for the 2019 elections but before the infrastructure for the program was ready.

There is a Filipino expression that goes, “Bahala Na ang Diyos” (“It’s up to God”). A person says it when he thinks he has done what can be done and leaves to God if there is anything else to be done. Actually, he feels not enough has been done but he is tired or he has a deadline to meet. The present generation, having been exposed to many Batman movies, has changed the expression. That must have been what the authors of the Act Instituting Universal Health Care expressed, “Bahala na si Batman.”

 

Oscar Lagman, Jr. was once country manager for a multinational health insurance company and at another time head of Healthcare Consulting at a large consulting firm. On a USAID grant, he attended an executive program on Managed Care in the US and observed several HMOs there.

How to make the UAE’s deal with Israel truly historic

By The Editors

The dramatic and welcome decision by the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to normalize relations with Israel is indisputably a win for both countries and for the Trump administration, which helped broker the deal. There’s an even bigger victory to be had, though, if all sides seize this opportunity to promote real peace in the region.

The three parties involved will be tempted to bask in this moment. Though Israel’s informal ties with the UAE have been strong for years and the deal merely brings them into the open, it’s nevertheless a breakthrough: proof, especially if others such as Bahrain and Oman follow the UAE’s lead, that Israel can establish relations with Arab countries before a final settlement with the Palestinians. Beleaguered Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will gratefully accept the reprieve from his political difficulties. So will US President Donald Trump, who is eager to showcase some evidence of his dealmaking skills ahead of the November election.

For its part, the UAE has earned itself goodwill on both sides of the aisle in Washington — which will be useful in the struggle against its real geopolitical foe, Iran — as well as the chance to buy advanced weaponry from the US. But the leader of the UAE, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed, could achieve much more. He traded recognition for a promise from Netanyahu to suspend his threat to annex a third of the West Bank, as originally envisioned under the Trump administration’s Middle East peace plan. Furious Palestinian leaders say that was merely a fig leaf. It doesn’t have to be.

The UAE now has a real chance to play peacemaker. Though Netanyahu says annexation has only been suspended temporarily, the fact is that he cannot afford to alienate MBZ, as the ambitious crown prince is known. If the latter is interested in pursuing peace, he should have little difficulty coordinating with Egypt and Jordan, the only other Arab countries to have normalized relations with Israel, and most important, with the US. MBZ already has good relations with the Trump administration. A Biden White House should be even more supportive of a real peace effort.

Israeli hardliners will say the deal shows that they don’t need to make peace with the Palestinians — that joint interests in technological and economic development, and especially in thwarting Iran’s ambitions, will inexorably push Arab nations and Israel together. They’re wrong. Normalizing ties with other Arab countries will not eliminate the Palestinian problem. In fact, by giving up on annexation, Netanyahu is effectively admitting that Israel cannot simply impose its will in the West Bank. Any move now to restart the process of annexation, or even to stonewall peace efforts, would risk a break not just with the UAE but its partners.

Palestinian leaders, too, should see that they have to deal with the Israel they have, not the one they want. Rather than continuing to fulminate, they should work with the UAE to develop concrete and realistic counter-proposals to the Trump plan, and push to reinvigorate talks in which they’re full and constructive partners. If they do, what might otherwise be a limited bilateral agreement could herald a real breakthrough.

BLOOMBERG OPINION

 

West’s potent duos face off in Mavericks-LA Clippers series

THE Los Angeles Clippers begin pursuit of the NBA title when they square off with the offense-loving Dallas Mavericks on Monday night near Orlando in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs.

The second-seeded Clippers are hoping to ride the duo of two-time NBA Finals MVP Kawhi Leonard and Paul George as far as possible, while the seventh-seeded Mavericks are aiming to post an upset behind young guns Luka Doncic and Kristaps Porzingis.

The task facing Dallas (43-32) is certainly tough as it went 0-3 against Los Angeles this season, including a 126-111 setback in the ‘bubble’ on Aug. 6. That marked the second time the Mavericks lost by 15 to the Clippers (49-23).

“We have a very tough matchup, but this is a great opportunity for us,” Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle told reporters. “We know that we’re playing a team on the very highest level of this league.

“It’s going to be very challenging, very physical. But we’ve had a couple of good days of prep, and we’ve looking forward to the opportunity.”

Points figure to be keep the scoreboard busy in this series as Dallas (117.0) ranked third in the NBA in scoring while the Clippers (116.3) were fourth.

Both teams were in the middle of the pack in scoring defense — Los Angeles (109.9) ranked 13th and the Mavericks (112.1) were 16th.

Dallas thrives behind Doncic (28.8 points, 9.4 rebounds, 8.8 assists) and Porzingis (20.4 points, 9.5 rebounds). LA’s duo of Leonard (27.1 points, 7.1 rebounds) and George (21.5 points, 5.7 rebounds) is just as potent and much more experienced in the postseason.

Leonard, after all, has won NBA titles with the San Antonio Spurs (2014) and Toronto Raptors (2019). He was the MVP both times.

Now he’s looking to take a third crew to the finals.

“It’s a great accomplishment,” Leonard said of making the playoffs. “For me and Paul and the rest of the guys that were here, them being the eighth seed last year, us coming into a new system, able to play that well together our first year under all these circumstances. … We’re still in the journey. We just got to keep enjoying each day and the process.”

The Clippers are expected to have backup power forward Montrezl Harrell available for the opener.

The 26-year-old recently returned to the NBA bubble after being away due to the death of his grandmother. He has been in quarantine since arriving in the Orlando area.

Not as likely to play are veteran point guard Patrick Beverley (calf) and young sharpshooter Landry Shamet (foot). Both were listed as questionable in Sunday’s injury report.

The possibility that there won’t be Beverley’s in-your-face guarding tactics certainly won’t disappoint Doncic, who recorded 17 triple-doubles this season.

The 21-year-old averaged 29 points, seven rebounds and seven assists in the three regular-season setbacks against the Clippers.

There has yet to be a time in which Clippers coach Doc Rivers isn’t fretting when Doncic is on the floor.

“Luka just creates a matchup,” Rivers told reporters. “He has the ability to score. He gets to the paint. He’s strong. He’s an elite passer. There’s no great offense that doesn’t start with a great player, and he’s a great player.”

The Mavericks topped 130 points on 13 occasions — reaching at least 140 in four of them — with Doncic running the show.

The emergence of Porzingis as a running mate has made Dallas tougher to defend. Porzingis was especially stout in six bubble appearances as he averaged 30.5 points and 9.5 rebounds.

“That’s one of our strengths — our offense — and that’s just the way we play,” Porzingis told reporters. “We’re a dangerous team on offense, and on any given night we can surprise people, and we can beat anybody with our offense.

“We want to be a complete team, so we want to keep it going. It doesn’t mean much if you’re not able to win games. So, we just want to win games, and then everybody is going to be talking about us.” — Reuters

Hamilton takes dominant win in the Spanish Grand Prix

FORMULA ONE world champion Lewis Hamilton won in Spain for the fourth year in a row on Sunday to celebrate a record 156th podium finish and stretch his already commanding lead to 37 points.

The victory from pole position on a sweltering afternoon at Barcelona’s Circuit de Catalunya, in a race without spectators due to the pandemic, was the 88th of the Mercedes driver’s career, and one of the more straightforward.

The six-times champion lapped all but the top three in a race that offered few thrills other than for fans of tire management.

“I was in a different zone — I didn’t even realize it was the last lap,” said Hamilton, who described the race as one of his best in terms of how he drove.

“I was just in a daze out there…I was ready to keep going,” he added, speaking of how he felt completely at one with the car.

Hamilton is now just three wins short of Ferrari great Michael Schumacher’s unmatched 91, and the podium ended another of the German’s records that he had shared with the Briton since last Sunday at Silverstone.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, Hamilton’s closest challenger after six races and winner a week ago of the 70th Anniversary Grand Prix, finished runner-up but a massive 24.177 seconds behind.

Valtteri Bottas was third for Mercedes, having taken the fastest lap after a late stop for fresh tyres, in another big setback for the Finn.

Verstappen has now beaten Bottas in the last four races and been second to Hamilton in three of them. Hamilton has 132 points to Verstappen’s 95, with Bottas falling further behind on 89.

“The weakness for Valtteri today was the start. He caught up to Max but he couldn’t overtake as the soft tyres didn’t work as expected,” commented Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff.

WARNING FLAGS
Verstappen had lined up third on the grid but grabbed second at the start as Bottas was squeezed on both sides and dropped to fourth, taking back third place four laps later.

Canadian Lance Stroll took fourth place for Racing Point with Mexican team mate Sergio Perez ahead of him at the finish, on a one-stop strategy, but with a five-second penalty for ignoring blue warning flags.

Stroll had seized third at the start with an impressive surge past his team mate, who was returning from two weeks in quarantine after testing positive for COVID-19.

“I saw a gap on the inside went for it, and it really set me up,” said the Canadian, whose team were again protested by Renault afterwards as at the previous four races. Stewards applied a reprimand, as before.

Racing Point have already been docked 15 points and fined 400,000 euros for a breach of the sporting regulations with a car that is a close copy of last year’s Mercedes but Renault are appealing for a heavier punishment.

Spaniard Carlos Sainz was sixth for McLaren and Sebastian Vettel seventh for Ferrari, after doing close to 40 laps on one set of soft tyres, with Red Bull’s Alexander Albon eighth for Red Bull.

AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was ninth and Lando Norris took the final point for McLaren.

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was the sole retirement of the afternoon, having spun off after an engine cut-out due to an electrical problem, possibly caused by a kerb. — Reuters

Herman hits peak form for win in North Carolina

NEW YORK — Jim Herman capped off a superb weekend of play with a win at the Wyndham Championship on Sunday, shooting a seven-under par 63 in the final round of the Greensboro, North Carolina, tournament.

Herman, who started the day tied for fifth after carding a nine-under 61 in Saturday’s action, kept his hot streak going at Sedgefield Country Club, firing two birdies and an eagle in the first five holes of the final round.

“Obviously you don’t expect 61 or 63 on a regular basis, but when you need it, there was nowhere else to go but deep,” said Herman, as he picked up his third PGA Tour win in a little over four years. “Best golf I’ve played in my life obviously.”

Runner-up Billy Horschel, who carded a five-under par 65, saw victory slip through his fingers after bogeying on 16 and missing a birdie putt on 17, ultimately sparing Herman from a playoff after a near-miss putt for birdie on 18.

“I thought if I just played it just outside right edge a ball, ball and a half, hit it with – kept the speed up on it, I thought it would make it in,” said Horschel. “It was disappointing because I had two good looks the last couple holes and just wasn’t able to convert.”

The 42-year-old Herman, who didn’t pick up his first PGA win until he was 38, said “you’ve got to play like everything’s on the line” on the Tour.

“Outside of a few wins by the old guys in their 40s, it’s a young man’s game, so it’s nice to compete and show you can do it,” he said.

Kim Si-woo, the leader heading into the final round after sinking a hole in one on Saturday, finished tied for third at 18-under after carding an even-par 70, along with Americans Kevin Kisner (64), Doc Redman (68) and 2012 US Open champ Webb Simpson (65). — Reuters

Rockets’ Westbrook (quad) ruled out for Game 1

HOUSTON coach Mike D’Antoni confirmed Sunday that star point guard Russell Westbrook will miss Game 1 of the Rockets’ series with the Oklahoma City Thunder on Tuesday.

Westbrook sat out Friday’s regular-season finale after an MRI confirmed a strained right quadriceps muscle. His status for the rest of the first-round Western Conference series against his former team is murky.

“It’s not something that’s going to miraculously go away tomorrow,” D’Antoni told reporters in a Zoom call. “It’s going to be a few days.”

Veteran Eric Gordon will start in Westbrook’s place. Gordon’s primary defensive assignment will be Oklahoma City point guard Chris Paul, the player Westbrook was traded for in a blockbuster deal in July 2019.

A nine-time All-Star, Westbrook played his first 11 seasons with the Thunder.

Westbrook was late to join the NBA’s restart after he tested positive for COVID-19. He first felt soreness in his right quad on Aug. 4 after a game against the Portland Trail Blazers, sitting out the next two games as a precaution.

Westbrook, 31, averaged 27.2 points, 7.9 rebounds and 7.0 assists in 57 games during his first season with the Rockets.

Gordon, 31, averaged 14.4 points and shot a career-worst 36.9% from the field in 36 games (15 starts) this season. — Reuters

Jazz G Conley leaves bubble for birth of child

UTAH JAZZ point guard Mike Conley left the NBA bubble Sunday to go to Columbus, Ohio, for the birth of his son, the team announced.

Conley, who sat out Thursday’s final seeding game near Orlando due to right knee soreness, will not be available when sixth-seeded Utah opens its first-round Western Conference playoff series Monday against the third-seeded Denver Nuggets.

Conley had made his intentions clear in an Instagram post last month celebrating his sixth wedding anniversary with his wife, Mary Peluso. “Can’t wait for baby #3 in August! This bubble won’t keep me from that,” he posted.

Conley, 32, averaged 14.4 points, 4.4 assists and 3.2 rebounds in 47 games (41 starts) in his first season with Utah in 2019-20.

He was traded by Memphis to the Jazz in July 2019 after spending his first 12 NBA seasons with the Grizzlies.

Drafted No. 4 overall in 2007 out of Ohio State, Conley has career averages of 14.9 points, 5.6 assists, 3.0 rebounds and 1.4 steals in 835 games (799 starts).

With Conley out for at least the first few games of the playoffs, the Nuggets will likely call on Donovan Mitchell and Joe Ingles to handle the ball more. Emmanuel Mudiay will come off the bench as the backup point guard. — Reuters

De Jong sends gritty Sevilla past Man United into Europa League final

EUROPA LEAGUE thoroughbreds Sevilla reached yet another final as substitute Luuk de Jong struck in the 78th minute to earn them a gritty 2-1 victory over Manchester United on Sunday.

United, already beaten in two domestic semi-finals this season, looked on course to make it third time lucky when Bruno Fernandes scored from the penalty spot in the ninth minute.

But former Liverpool player Suso leveled in the 26th minute, and the Spaniards showed all their European know-how to weather a United storm on a humid night in Cologne.

Inspired goalkeeper Yassine Bono came to Sevilla’s rescue on several occasions, and when United’s energy levels dipped, De Jong stole in to snatch victory.

Sevilla will meet either Inter Milan or Shakhtar Donetsk in the final in Cologne on Friday, when they will be going for their sixth title in the competition since 2006.

“I feel like I’ve been hugged by joy. We know what this side has been through, today included, and we’ve got such a resilience against such intensity,” said Sevilla coach Julen Lopetegui, whose side are now unbeaten in 20 games in all competitions.

While Sevilla have a chance to restore Spanish pride after Barcelona’s horror show in the Champions League quarterfinals on Friday, United’s defeat underlined a poor European season for English clubs, who provided all four finalists in last season’s Europa and Champions League competitions.

United were the only English club to reach a continental semifinal this season after Manchester City were dumped out of the Champions League by Lyon on Saturday.

Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s side may ask themselves how they allowed this one to slip through their fingers though.

“The keeper’s had a fantastic game. Of course it’s disappointing that we don’t score. We know we have players who have the quality to score, but that’s the game,” Solskjaer said.

“You could see how tired they were towards the end. Tired legs, tired minds.”

United made a dream start when Diego Carlos brought down Marcus Rashford in the area just after the striker fired across goal. The referee belatedly pointed to the spot, handing United their 22nd penalty of the season in all competitions, and Bruno Fernandes, who almost turned in Rashford’s shot, smashed his spot kick past Bono.

Fred had a chance to make it 2-0 for United on the counter-attack but in a wildly open first half, Sevilla leveled when Suso swept in Sergio Reguilon’s low cross.

United should have led by halftime with Anthony Martial side-footing a great chance over the bar, Rashford stinging the palms of Bono, and Fernandes’s improvised volley forcing another fine save from the Moroccan.

Bono made another instinctive stop from Mason Greenwood just after halftime as United laid siege to the Sevilla goal.

Martial was also denied by Bono as Sevilla’s goal led a charmed life, but they battened down the hatches and regained a foothold as United’s intensity inevitably waned.

United had 20 attempts at goal compared with Sevilla’s nine, but all the spurned gilt-edged chances came back to bite them as their hopes of a first trophy since winning the Europa League under Jose Mourinho three years ago evaporated.

To make matters worse it was former Manchester City player Jesus Navas’s cross from the right that caught Victor Lindelof and Aaron Wan-Bissaka sleeping and De Jong drifted in behind the pair of them to slot home.

United’s frustration was such that Lindelof and Fernandes had a heated row.

“I think it’s normal (to be frustrated) when you concede a goal in the last 10 minutes. What happened between me and Victor was nothing,” Fernandes said afterwards. — Reuters

New Zealand postpones election

WELLINGTON — New Zealand’s prime minister postponed the country’s general election on Monday by a month to Oct. 17 as the city of Auckland remains in lockdown due to a growing coronavirus outbreak.

Jacinda Ardern bowed to pressure to delay the polls after some parties complained they could not campaign with nearly a third of New Zealand’s 5 million people under lockdown in Auckland.

“Ultimately, the 17th of October … provides sufficient time for parties to plan around the range of circumstances we will be campaigning under,” Ms. Ardern said at a news conference.

She ruled out delaying the polls any further, as her Labour Party maintains a strong lead over the conservative National Party in opinion polls.

“We are all in the same boat. We are all campaigning in the same environment,” Ms. Ardern said.

New Zealand on Monday recorded nine new cases of COVID-19, taking the number of active cases to 78. There have now been a total of 1,280 cases in the country, and 22 deaths.

An earlier election would have worked in Ms. Ardern’s favor, as her success in stifling COVID-19 and keeping the country virus-free for 102 days until the latest outbreak had boosted her popularity.

The election was scheduled for Sept. 19 and New Zealand law requires it to be held by Nov. 21. Advance voting will now start on Oct. 3.

Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters, who had called for a delay, said “common sense has prevailed.”

The leader of the populist New Zealand First party delivered government to Labour through a coalition deal after no party won a majority at the 2017 election.

BORDER FAILURE?
Ms. Ardern’s opponents accuse her of using the pandemic to shore up support as she appears on television nearly every day to reassure New Zealanders, while other party leaders struggle to get attention.

Her rivals are hoping Ms. Ardern loses some of her appeal once economic hardships caused by the lockdown begin to bite.

New Zealand has fared far better than most countries during the pandemic but an abrupt resurgence of COVID-19 last week in Auckland prompted Ms. Ardern to extend a lockdown for the city’s 1.7 million residents until Aug. 26, while social distancing rules are in place in other towns and cities.

The origin of the new outbreak is still unknown. Authorities said previously that it could have been through an Americold cold-storage facility where one of the infected individuals worked.

Tests of surfaces in the facility are under way to identify the genome sequence. Australian authorities are also investigating if there is any link to an Americold facility in the Australian city of Melbourne, where COVID-19 cases have surged in recent weeks.

Results are expected later this week.

Another possible source is the quarantine system for New Zealanders returning from overseas.

“Right now the focus must be on finding out exactly what failed so catastrophically at the border so we can be sure it won’t happen again,” National Party leader Judith Collins said on Twitter.

New Zealanders celebrated when authorities eliminated community transmission of the coronavirus at the start of the pandemic with a hard lockdown that forced almost everyone to stay at home.

The government extended a wage subsidy scheme and mortgage deferral program to support businesses and jobs affected by the lockdown.  — Reuters

S. Korea warns of tighter rules amid worst virus outbreak in months

SEOUL — South Korea warned on Monday of tighter novel coronavirus restrictions as new outbreaks appeared, including one linked to a church where more than 300 members of the congregation have been infected but hundreds more are reluctant to get tested.

The outbreak linked to the Sarang Jeil Church in Seoul is the country’s biggest in nearly six months and led to a tightening of social distancing rules on Sunday.

The Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC) reported 197 new cases as of midnight on Saturday, mostly in the Seoul metropolitan area, marking the fourth day of a three-digit tally.

South Korea has been one of the world’s coronavirus mitigation success stories but it has nevertheless battled persistent spikes in infections. The latest cases brought its total infections to 15,515 including 305 deaths.

The outbreak at the Seoul church has revived fears seen in February when authorities were struggling with an outbreak that emerged in a secretive Christian sect in the city of Daegu and became the country’s deadliest cluster.

As in the earlier case, authorities are facing some reluctance to cooperate and difficulty in tracking some of the members of the congregation.

Vice Health Minister Kim Gang-lip said the Presbyterian church had provided inaccurate lists of its members. While 312 of them had tested positive, more than 700 who authorities want to see in isolation were unaccounted for.

“We’re very concerned,” Kim told a briefing, dismissing rumors that authorities would record every church member’s test as positive regardless of the truth.

“That’s impossible. We can’t fabricate test results,” he said.

The church is led by a conservative activist, Reverend Jun Kwang-hoon, who has also been organizing anti-government rallies calling for the ouster of liberal President Moon Jae-in, raising worry that the virus has been spreading at his protests too.

‘OBSTRUCTING TRACING’
Jun, 64, took part in a protest on Saturday in defiance of a government order that all church members self-isolate and get tested.

The church did not respond to calls seeking comment. Jun said in an interview with a Christian media outlet that he complied with the rules but his church was a victim of “virus terror.”

A ban on church services was lifted in April though attendees are required to register and sit apart.

Kim said if the rate of new infections did not stabilise this week the government would tighten distancing, shut high-risk facilities and ban indoor meetings of 50 people or more and outdoor gatherings of 100 or more.

The health ministry has filed a complaint against Jun for violating quarantine rules and “obstructing” contact tracing by holding the Saturday rally and failing to provide a full list of members.

Jun faces earlier charges of violating election laws and had been banned from joining protests as a bail condition. A prosecutors’ office said on Sunday it wanted his bail revoked.

Among smaller clusters of cases, 120 infections have been traced to a Christian church in the city of Yongin and about 30 linked to a coffee outlet in the city of Paju. — Reuters

Taiwan to step up efforts to prevent Chinese spies settling

TAIPEI — Taiwan will step up scrutiny of mainland Chinese citizens who are residents of Hong Kong and seek to move to the island to ensure they do not engage in spying or other illegal acts, the government said on Monday.

Taiwan has offered to welcome Hong Kong people who wish to leave the turmoil-hit Chinese-run city for the democratic island, especially after Beijing imposed a new national security law on the former British colony, though Taiwan officials have expressed concern some who come may be spies.

The new measures are aimed at “strengthening the management” of people from mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau who have residence in either of the two Chinese-ruled cities and seek to settle in Taiwan, the island’s Mainland Affairs Council said.

It aims to prevent them from “carrying out infiltration, united front, disturbance or spying activities”, the council said.

United front refers to the Chinese Communist Party’s United Front Work Department, which is in charge of co-opting overseas Chinese and non-communists.

The order targets Hong Kong and Macau residents who are originally from mainland China, or who are current or previous party, government or military officials, the council added.

Applications from such people will be subject to cross-department review to help protect national security, it said.

Communist China claims capitalist Taiwan as its “sacred” territory and has never renounced the use of force to bring it under Beijing’s control, though most people in Taiwan have shown no interest in being ruled by China.

Taiwan and China have extensive business and people-to-people exchanges but remain deeply suspicious of each other.

Taiwan in July opened an office to help Hong Kong people who wish to move to the island.

Taiwan has long been wary of Chinese efforts to influence its democracy through illicit funding of politicians and the media and other methods like spying.

Parliament last year passed an anti-infiltration law to improve how Taiwan combats perceived threats from China.

Beijing denounced the move, saying Taiwan was trying to stir up enmity towards China.  — Reuters

Establishing healthy boundaries while working from home

By Patricia B. Mirasol

Employees who work from home (WFH) tend to work longer hours. According to a study by Harvard Business School, the pandemic workday is, on average, “48.5 minutes longer than usual. It also has 13% more meetings and 1.4 more daily emails.”

Companies can help staff engaged in remote work by putting measures in place that support their overall well-being. In a recent mental health dialogue organized by pharmaceutical manufacturing firm Upjohn Philippines, Dr. Robert Buenaventura, consultant psychiatrist at UERM Memorial Medical Center and a life fellow of the Philippine Psychiatric Association, advised employees to consult their human resources department on setting healthy work-from-home boundaries. Upjohn general manager Melissa Comia likewise emphasized the importance of having a workplace that’s a safe place to raise concerns and thoughts.

“Wellness is not a perk. It is an integral part of employee life,” said Mr. Buenaventura, citing recent government guidelines for mental health workplace policies.

COMPANY COMMITMENTS
TaskUs, a business process outsourcing (BPO) company, recently announced that it was extending its WFH policy to the end of 2020—the first BPO in the Philippines to do so.  It also released guidelines such as keeping Friday free of meetings, avoiding professional chats on weekends, and respecting time off. “We encourage everyone to refrain from sending emails and other work-related communications after shift unless it’s really urgent and business-impacting,” said Bryce Maddock, TaskUs CEO and co-founder.

The BPO company also allows lactation breaks and flexible schedules for employees who need to guide their children through distance learning—the general rule being working with their immediate superiors in finding the best time that would allow them to focus on their families without sacrificing work productivity.

Upjohn, for its part, has “Wacky Wednesdays,” where members get together over WebEx to check in and decompress. Its parent company, Pfizer Philippines, provides mental health support to staff, including confidential and professional counseling.

MANAGING SCHEDULES
An employee with Citibank Philippines, meanwhile, shared that they didn’t experience that much of a change in terms of WFH policies because the company already had flexible work schedules prior to the pandemic. “Citi bankers can go online anytime and offline when needed—as long as deliverables are met.” She also shared that staff members have open communication lines with their bosses. Parents who have other life responsibilities are likewise encouraged to work out an arrangement with their manager.

When designing schedules, Dr. Buenaventura suggested penciling in time to indulge in hobbies, checking in with one’s personal network, and supporting communities in need as ways of avoiding burnout and keeping positive and hopeful in these challenging times.

 

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