Indigents joined under the 2018 Universal Health Care Act. PhilHealth gets sin taxes on alcohol, tobacco, sweets. Total: 41.84 million.
Self-entitled senators, congressmen, Presidents, VPs and Cabinetmen treat PhilHealth as government money.
They divert our money to pork barrels and political ayuda – then punish us members for faults of PhilHealth appointees.
We lack basic health benefits: doctor's consultation, x-ray, blood works, urine and stool tests, mammogram, prostate ultrasound, eye-ear-nose-throat-dental checks.
Only if hospitalized do we receive P5,500, one percent of total bill, in return for our decades-long contributions.
Destitutes are worse off. To enjoy benefits they must queue up for Medical Assistance for Indigent Patients, indebting them to politicos.
Ledesma doesn't care. He's busy planning a P138-million banquet, with P2,500-giveaway umbrellas, on PhilHealth's 30th anniversary this year. He didn't care that 4,000 deceased members are still in the database.
MAIP political requests and billion-peso PhilHealth releases double each year, former finance undersecretary Cielo Magno exposed.
In January 2024, PhilHealth CEO Emmanuel Ledesma raised our contributions to P500-P5,000 a month "for added benefits." Finance Sec. Ralph Recto then snatched P90 billion from PhilHealth for roadworks.
Saying it was on President Bongbong Marcos' order, Ledesma gave in "like a good soldier." The Congress supermajority cheered.
The 96,000-strong Philippine Medical Association, 72 specialist societies, a million nurses, labor federations, businessmen and professionals, religious leaders, retired generals, former Cabinet members, academics and NGOs protested.
This story is from the January 01, 2025 edition of The Philippine Star.
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This story is from the January 01, 2025 edition of The Philippine Star.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
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