Today, 8 people out of 10 in the Philippines report never having had a medical check-up or physical examination in their life. 28% of all Filipino women have no skilled birth attendance care. Due to poverty, 6 out of 10 people die in the Philippines without ever having seen a doctor. Health care utilisation rates in the Philippines show worse access to health than the regional average. The primary reason is a lack of financial means. Free health services are very limited and the poorest cannot afford treatment or medicine.
A long history of privatization...
Health care in the Philippines became increasingly inaccessible for the poor majority since the policy of privatization which started in the 1970s during the Marcos era. Philippine foreign debt became insurmountable and the IMF-World Bank imposed the Structural Adjustment Program, leading to privatizing state assets for more income. This practice was followed by succeeding presidents and governments, like in 2000 by President Joseph Estrada under the Health Sector Reform Agenda (HSRA) and Executive Order 366. This program was to provide fiscal autonomy and expanding the coverage of the national health insurance, also called Philhealth. The policy included the corporatization of public hospitals and integration of the four Government Owned and Controlled Corporation (GOCC) Hospitals to cater to medical tourism. The aim of the government is to relegate its responsibility of providing people’s right to health to the private sector. What happened is that since people have to pay for their treatment, rates increased so much higher that in the GOCC hospitals specializing on the heart, kidney, lung and children, health services are no longer free. In fact, a kidney transplants cost more than one million PHP or 19.000€.
This privatization policies continued under different names from President Benigno Aquino III under the “Philippine Development Plan” (2011-2016) which strengthened implementation of the National Insurance Policy or Philhealth, public-private partnership (PPP) and the millennium development goals in health. Health Services in public hospitals became a commercial product and Philhealth covers only 9% to 11% of total costs, except for 23 selected cases only. According to the Department of Health data, 54% of the total cost of health services is out-of-pocket.
Fight against privatization
Under PPP, Philippine Orthopedic Center, the only public bone specialization in the Philippines was a pilot project. The government plan was to bid the modernization of the hospital to private funds of 5.6 Billion PHP or 106 million € with a concession of 25 years private operation of the hospital, with an option to renew for another 25 years of private operation. The ugly side of this business is that only 70 beds out of the 700 bed capacity will be allocated to service patients, and not indigent patients. The private investor, Megawide, also has an option to terminate the health workers.