The ‘Corporatization’ of the Public Health System

Official statistics show that seven out of every 10 Filipinos die without ever seeing a doctor and that the nearly 75 percent of the population living below poverty line are mainly in rural areas where there is no access to basic services such as health and medical care. Yet the government has allotted a mere 30 centavos per Filipino per day for health care. And now, its thrust is the “corporatization” of the health system translating into higher fees and eventually the privatization of public health care services.

By Karl G. Ombion & Ranie Azue
Bulatlat.com

The reality in private hospitals where an in-patient must first give a down payment of P2,000 upon admission is now also true in public hospitals today. A public hospital patient now has to pay a deposit of P500 to P1,000 first.

This is why, according to health activists, the health situation of Filipinos has become deplorable. Official statistics show that seven out of every 10 Filipinos die without even seeing a doctor. Nearly 75 percent of Filipinos live below the poverty line, most of them from the rural areas. These are the people who have no access to the most basic services including health care and medical treatment.

Health activists conclude that the inaccessibility of health services and the worsening health situation are due to the government’s thrust of pursuing the policy of privatization, where ownership and control of public services and utilities, like power, water, schools, and hospitals, are being turned over to private corporations whose main objective is to profit. This trend is called the “corporatization” of public services.

In 1998, the government formed a “Task Force on Corporatization” led by the Department of Health (DOH). It evaluated public hospitals regarding their viability for fiscal autonomy and restructuring, in line with the thrust towards “corporatization” of 38 state-run hospitals nationwide.

The evaluation showed most public hospitals are inefficient, unprofitable and unsustainable. Hence, the government implemented the Health Sector Reform Agenda (HSRA) aiming for: hospital revitalization or modernization, financing system expansion, conversion into public corporation, improvement of hospital networking and patient referral system, and organizational changes.

Higher tariff for medical services

In line with the national government’s thrust, the Negros Occidental provincial government raised the tariff for medical services in government hospitals.

Data obtained by Bulatlat revealed that the provincial government passed Provincial Tax Ordinance No. 92-002, amending Provincial Tax Ordinance 97-001, raising the fees being charged by government hospitals at an unprecedented rate of 250% compared to the year 2000.

In Article C of the said Provincial Tax Ordinance, the following standard rates are set:

Rates for the use of laboratory facilitates vary from a minimum of P45 to a high of P400. Oftentimes laboratory needs of patients are referred to private laboratories since most of the procedures needed are not available. Worse is the reported blatant collaboration between hospital personnel particularly laboratory technicians and physicians and private laboratories.

The charge for ultrasound service ranges from P350 to P900.Use of x-ray machines is pegged at P150; incubator fee at P240 a day or P10 per hour; respirator machine excluding oxygen at P250; cardio monitor at P500; and respirator tubing, P950 per piece.

Negros Occidental Governor Joseph Maranon said the imposition of standard rates is intended to generate revenues for better services. The funds generated are used for the replenishment of hospital supplies and upgrading of facilities, the governor said.

A long time resident nursing aide however belied the Governor’s statement saying that the provincial hospital looks modern outside but is dilapidated inside. Requesting not to be identified, she took Bulatlat around the buildings and showed how some of the rooms and ceilings have remained unfinished while some have been severely damaged or poorly maintained. Worse, she added, patients are charged for the use of medical equipment donated by politicians and benevolent groups for the use of the public.

Privatization cum “corporatization”

Corporatization, as defined the Center for Investigative Research and Media Services (CIRMS), is the process of take over by private corporate interest of a public utility entity, which eventually leads to full privatization.

In its study of selected cases of privatized government utilities, CIRMS said corporatization has two types. One is the direct sale of a government or public utility to a private company. The most common reasons given for this are government inefficiency, slow modernization, and indebtedness of the utility. CIRMS cited the case of national government companies as examples.

The second is the indirect takeover by a private corporate interest of a public utility firm for the same reasons as above. CIRMS cited the case of local water units, financial institutions, and the Corazon Locsin Montelibano Memorial Regional Hospital (CLMMRH), which have heavy private investments.

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