Quantcast
Article Index |Advertise | Mobile | RSS | Wireless | Newsletter | Archive | Corrections | Syndication | Contact us | About Us| Services
 
  Breaking News :    
Advertisement
Property Guide
Inquirer Mobile

INQUIRER ALERT
Get the free INQUIRER newsletter
Enter your email address:




 
Breaking News / Nation Type Size: (+) (-)
You are here: Home > News > Breaking News > Nation

  ARTICLE SERVICES      
     Reprint this article     Print this article  
    Send Feedback  
    Post a comment   Share  

  RELATED STORIES  





imns



4 hospitals won’t join ‘hospital holiday’

By Dona Pazzibugan
Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 21:08:00 08/11/2009

Filed Under: Hospitals and Clinics, Medicines

MANILA, Philippines ? At least four private hospitals in Metro Manila said they would not join a ?hospital holiday? being planned by a group of private hospitals to protest the start of price control on five essential medicines on August 15

Officials of the privately-owned Makati Medical Center, Medical City, St. Luke's Hospital, and University of Sto. Tomas Hospital Tuesday assured the Department of Health that they had no problem with the implementation of the presidential order setting the maximum retail prices starting that day.

Over the weekend, representatives of the Private Hospitals Association of the Philippines (PHAP) threatened to stage a ?hospital holiday,? meaning they would only accept emergency cases during the period of protest.

PHAP wants Malacañang to delay the effectivity of Executive Order 821 until its member hospitals finish selling all existing stocks which were purchased at higher prices.

A scheduled meeting between officials of the DoH and PHAP on Tuesday was postponed because key hospital officials were in Vietnam on official business.

Doctor Robert So, program director of the DoH's National Drug Policy which oversees government efforts to bring down the cost of medicines, said officials of Makati Medical Center, Medical City, St. Luke's Hospital, UST Hospital and the government-run Philippine General Hospital were at the meeting.

So said the price difference between the existing market price and the new price ceilings should be shouldered by the drug manufacturers and not by the retailers which includes drugstores and hospital pharmacies.

He said the DoH was waiting for PHAP officials to return so they could sit down for a dialogue.

?They have been invited so we expect to talk soon,? he said. ?It may be that not all private hospitals know the details of the [executive order], so maybe it's a case of inadequate information dissemination.?

PHAP legal counsel Dr. Bu Castro on Tuesday said they were not satisfied with the ?verbal commitment? given by drug companies to give rebates to drugstores and pharmacies once the price reductions start.

Castro said their member-hospitals feared they might go into ?bankruptcy? if the implementation of the drug maximum retail price was not delayed.

?We will tell [the staff] that we can't afford to pay [their] salaries anymore. We are not blackmailing anyone. But this is something that could happen. Will the staff still want to report to work? If no one will report to work, the hospital will be closed,? he said.

Malacañang?s EO 821 sets a maximum retail price on the anti-hypertensive drug amlodipine, the anti-cholesterol drug atorvastatin, the antibiotic/antibacterial drug azithromycin, and the anti-neoplastics/anti-cancer drugs cytarabine and doxorubicin.

The DoH had originally drawn up a list of 21 essential drugs which it found to be sold at exorbitant prices. But in a bid to preempt the government price control law, drug companies agreed to voluntarily lower the prices of 16 of these drugs by at least 50 per cent and offered to reduce the prices of 22 other medicines by 10-50 per cent.

Despite the threat of a hospital protest, DoH officials said they would not push back the much-awaited implementation of EO 821.

A militant group of health practitioners seconded the DoH?s decision not to delay the implementation of the order but asked it to address the ?legitimate concerns? of small private hospitals in the provinces.

The Health Alliance for Democracy (HEAD) said it believed that the burden of drug price control should not be borne by small private hospitals, especially those in far-flung areas where there are no public hospitals.

On the threatened "hospital holiday," HEAD secretary General Dr. Geneve Rivera said, ?While (PHAP) concerns may be legitimate, they should be very careful to avoid being misconstrued as surrogates of the big pharmaceutical companies in a proxy war against efforts to make medicine affordable."



Copyright 2012 Philippine Daily Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Share

RELATED STORIES:

OTHER STORIES:


  ^ Back to top

© Copyright 2001-2012 INQUIRER.net, An INQUIRER Company

The INQUIRER Network: HOME | NEWS | SPORTS | SHOWBIZ & STYLE | TECHNOLOGY | BUSINESS | OPINION | GLOBAL NATION | Site Map
Services: Advertise | Buy Content | Wireless | Newsletter | Low Graphics | Search / Archive | Article Index | Contact us
The INQUIRER Company: About the Inquirer | User Agreement | Link Policy | Privacy Policy

Advertisement
Megaworld
TAGAYTAY FONTAINE VILLAS
Radio on Inquirer.net
Inquirer VDO