‘Help Iloilo, high-risk areas to halt virus spread’

Senator Grace Poe (Office of senator Grace Poe Photo)

By Francis Allan L. Angelo

Sen. Grace Poe exhorted the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases to act with dispatch on the plea of Iloilo City and province and other high-risk local governments to augment their resources for COVID-19 relief to treat the rising influx of patients.

Poe echoed the call of some local executives that areas outside the National Capital Region which are considered as COVID hotspots should also be prioritized in the vaccine distribution to contain the spread of the virus that have spilled over to several provinces.

“While there aren’t enough vaccines yet for everybody, those who need them most should get them first, including our people in the provinces like Iloilo,” she said.

In several areas experiencing COVID spike, hospitals are stretched way too thin as medical personnel, rooms, beds and every piece of equipment are being exhausted to attend to patients, reports have said.

In the case of her hometown Iloilo City, Poe cited that the Iloilo Medical Society has sought the help of the national government over the need for more medicines, vaccines and medical frontliners, as hospital beds are filled to the brim and due reimbursements from the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. are delayed.

“It is very difficult to battle COVID-19 infections once it is already there. As true with other diseases, prevention is still the best option to win this battle,” the group wrote in pushing for increased allotment of the vaccines.

Poe said the increasing COVID cases in the provinces that have reached an alarming level should be the cue to spread the vaccine fast.

“When the medical frontliners themselves have sounded off the distress signal, we must listen and act,” she said.

Iloilo province and Iloilo City are among the 19 areas under the modified enhanced community quarantine until the end of the month.

Since June, the province has reported over a hundred cases a day.

Poe called for immediate action in addressing the resource shortage in Iloilo as well as in areas bearing the brunt of the virus surge. At the same time, she said the critical areas should get more vaccines to arrest the virus spread and ease the pressure on the health systems of local government units.

“A number of hospitals in the provinces are gasping for air as COVID cases surge almost beyond their health system’s capacity,” Poe said.

“There is no greater pain than seeing patients who otherwise can be saved breathe their last due to lack of medical and health support,” she added.

Faster PhilHealth reimbursements

Poe also called on the Philippine Health Insurance Corp. (PhilHealth) to immediately settle unpaid claims of hundreds of hospitals, saying failure to do so would put in jeopardy their pandemic response.

“PhilHealth should pay up. Hospitals are battlegrounds in this fight against COVID-19. They need what’s due to them, especially in this time when a number of them are overwhelmed with patients due to the recent surge of infections,” Poe said.

Poe cited reports that in Western Visayas alone, including Iloilo City, claims of hospitals and laboratories have reached over P800 million.

Local executives of the same area have raised the SOS to the national government over the lack of hospital beds, dwindling medical staff, inadequate vaccine supply, shortage of medicines and the slack in PhilHealth’s settling its dues.

“Being reimbursed of their rightful claims would capacitate hospitals to fully respond to the needs of their patients – both COVID-19 and non-COVID-19,” Poe said.

The senator said that PhilHealth owes it to its members to be able to deal with the challenges hounding its system to reimburse hospitals.

The state health insurer implemented a Debit-Credit Payment Method starting April supposedly to fast-track the payment of claims and make sure that all health claims were valid.

Poe said PhilHealth management should review the new system to determine if it’s fast and efficient enough.

“Lives are on the line every day. The people should be able to rely on the promises of the state health insurer amid the health crisis,” Poe added.