Government allots P9 billion to rural health care professionals
MANILA, Philippines — The national government has allotted P9 billion of its budget next year for the deployment of doctors, nurses, midwives and dentists to rural areas that are most in need of medical attention.
Surigao del Sur Rep. Johnny Pimentel said the Department of Health (DOH) is now enlisting 9,138 nurses, 3,650 midwives, 243 physicians and 241 dentists – or a total of 13,272 medical personnel – to provide additional medical services in the rural areas.
“The deployment is expected to proceed even in an extreme scenario wherein the government operates on a re-enacted spending program until February next year,” Pimentel, a member of the House appropriations committee, said.
Of the P9 billion for the Human Resources for Health Deployment Program, Pimentel said P7.8 billion is lodged in the miscellaneous personnel benefits fund, while the balance of P1.2 billion is with the DOH.
To augment regular staff, the DOH has been contracting extra health professionals every year to serve under the following programs:
Doctors to the Barrios, where physicians serve for two years mostly in fourth to sixth-class municipalities that have not had a doctor in the last 24 months;
Medical Pool Placement and Utilization Program, where physicians and/or medical specialists are deployed to DOH-run hospitals and/or provincial hospitals;
Registered Nurses for Health Enhancement and Local Service, where nurses serve for six months in community rural health units and another six months in public hospitals;
Rural Health Midwives Program, where midwives are assigned to barangay health stations and rural health units to provide maternal and child care services, including basic as well as comprehensive emergency obstetric and newborn care and Rural Health Team Placement Program, where dentists, medical technologists and nutritionist-dietitians are detailed to field health facilities to complement existing personnel.
“We would urge qualified health professionals looking for gainful employment to sign up, so they can help underserved communities while getting paid well,” Pimentel said.
The acquired training from the service would also help qualified professionals land even better jobs elsewhere later on, according to the lawmaker from Mindanao.
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