Friday, June 17, 2011

Blog Challenge Day 13

A letter to someone
who has hurt you recently

I have two letters. One for each person who has hurt me recently.

______________________

Dear You:

You hurt me. And I already told you why. I know by blogging about it, in the process, I hurt you too. For my words in that blog and for the blog, itself, I'm sorry. I let my emotions carry me away. But it's hard to be sorry for my emotions. Though I have professed, time and again, that my main purpose for losing weight is about health and not about vanity, I think, as a person who has such concerns, I am entitled to feel raw about those things, however big or small they may be, however funny or well-meant they are. You should know that you're not an isolated case. I even sometimes attack my own husband if extremely sensitive me (I'm a Cancerian!) thinks he goes beyond "wanting me to lose weight for health reasons". Shhh... Hehe.

I wish you the best on your upcoming wedding. I'm sorry I may not be able to attend. You're always in my prayers.

Always a friend,
Presh


______________________

Dear You #2:

I hope that you received my last text message. You know my only wish is that you and her realize daddy's worth before it's too late. I also hope it's clear to you that even if you hurt me so bad by calling me names,  should you both decide to show up before I leave for the US and declare your commitment in helping me take care of dad, I'd still welcome you in my house and leave behind that ugly past.

It's true. I hurt you too. But I wish you see that it's only because I had and still have high hopes and expectations from the both of you. I love dad so much that to have to leave him in a month's time will surely make me cry while on the plane.

It's Father's Day on Sunday. I pray that you find it in your hearts to really forgive him. His only wish is to see us complete. His only wish is to be given a chance to be a dad to you. It's not too late. Though I have already left everything in God's capable hands, I am somehow keeping the faith alive that he'll live long enough to see his grandkids from me and to see his grandkids from you.

Please do not waste this chance.

Your sister,
Precious

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

University of the Philippines: Students & Graduates, It's Payback Time!

OBLATION. The ultimate symbol of sacrifice in honor
of service to the country and to humanity.
Through blogger and former Chalk Magazine Official Student Correspondent (OSC) to the University of the Philippines (UP) Diliman colleague Ivan Henares, I found out about this (please click the title): 

New UP policy 'requires' med, nursing, public health grads to serve in Philippines within five years



The article talks about UP's new Return Service Agreement (RSA) policy that requires future graduates of the abovementioned courses to "serve for [two years] in the country within five years after graduation, or pay back twice the cost of their university degrees".

This had Ivan and me, along with other friends of his, debating on whether or not this is a good policy. Supporters base their arguments on the statement that taxpayers spend an estimated P1 million to produce a medical graduate of UP. Some even went to the extent of saying that this policy should include all students in the university and not just those taking health-related courses.


I say no to this.

CASAA. This is where many UP Diliman freshmen
are found eating and studying
I was one of the many students who took the UP College Admission Test (UPCAT) in 2000 in the hopes of entering the country's premier state university. Allow me to boast a little by saying that not only was I successful in passing the UPCAT, I also managed to enter the flagship campus (Diliman) of the university. Fast-forward to the present time, I have just told my husband that I actually have a lot more to be proud of; that if I had not passed the UPCAT, chances were, I would not have been able to complete my college degree on time due to financial difficulties. My dad's income as a part-time journalist and a full-time House of Representatives employee, not excluding our business profits, unfortunately, did not qualify me to apply for a more lenient bracket under UP's STFAP (Socialized Tuition Fee Assistance Program). And even if we were only paying an average of P6,000 per semester, my parents still struggled to make both ends meet. 

Given this situation, if my family and I, at our financial status during that time, were already having difficulties, how much more if the ones involved were those who had it harder than us financially?

Palma Hall
I speak not just for myself. I also now speak for them.

In my years as a language trainer at a call center in Manila, I interviewed a lot of applicants and talked to a lot of trainees who had nursing degrees. The period between 2007 and 2009 was the time when the country was producing a lot of nursing graduates but coming up with little job offers that had income commensurate to the profession level. The Philippines then found more and more medical professionals  -  nurses and doctors alike  -  looking at and searching for greener pastures.

Why wouldn't or shouldn't they?

There was a time I was enraged to have found that for a certain month, I was handling language training classes full of nursing graduates and professionals. I thought: "You guys are only using this free language training in call centers just so you can pass the language test required for your application abroad."

Then there's the nursing crowd who only took the course because that's the only way they could have a degree to their name. Those who were often clueless about what to do with their lives after high school often fell prey to the wishes of their benefactor (a parent or a relative) that they choose nursing over any other course as the profession pays well. And pay well it does. In another country. This crowd, after realizing that such scenario only happens after successful but often lengthy and arduous applications for jobs abroad, gathered courage and took the easy way out: They do not want to become nurses anymore. They have good paying jobs in call centers anyway.

What a waste!

Overtime though, I became more sympathetic to the plight of medical professionals. With the United States (US) in recession and working visa for nurses in retrogression, more and more turned to jobs in other countries. Some even had gone to the extent of accepting jobs as caregivers even if they're really qualified as doctors. I then knew that I had to balk on the idea that what's happening was less than honorable for the country.

TREE-LINED PATHS are all over the academic oval.
Supporters of the RSA focus on how right it is to give back to the country. "Country first before personal interests" as they say. It is righteous and ideal  -  if we are to speak the language wealthy and well-travelled Dr. Jose Rizal spoke during his time.

Don't get me wrong though: I do not wish to malign Rizal's life. My dad and I still think that he's the best Filipino that ever lived. But "country first before personal interests" may just be a little bit too ideal for the average Filipino graduate these days. When I say "average", I mean someone who do not have Latin honors tied to his degree and is bound to start with a salary that is only as high as P13,000. This graduate, most likely, is someone who lives in a rented apartment with aging parents and two to three younger siblings that he is expected to support once he starts earning.

What is P13,000 these days? P13,000 is the cost of a Nokia phone with 3 or 5 megapixels primary camera, a VGA secondary camera, a music and video player and an internet browsing capability. P13,000 is the monthly amortization one needs to pay if he has a 30-year Pag-ibig housing loan for a 2-BR condominium unit in a low-rise complex in the suburbs of Taguig (not the Bonifacio Global Complex, my dear!). P13,000 was an ordinary UP student's tuition fee for the entire year during my time (2001-2005). P13,000 is the cost of a three to four day hospital stay in a semi-private ward at the Philippine Heart Center, a specialized government hospital. P13,000 is the total cost of a Philhealth-subsidized dialysis treatment for an entire month at Hemotek, a renal center in Manila.

P13,000 is... not enough. For the upper and middle class, yes, maybe, it just simply isn't enough. But what about the poor? What about our average Filipino graduate whose entire family relies on him after he gets his degree? Let me provide custom-fit calculations:
___________


SALARY: P13,000
INCOME AFTER TAXES, ETC.: P11,500

Transportation fare for a 22-day work month: P352.00 roundtrip (if employee's office is only a jeepney-ride away with P8 as the normal fare)
Food at work (P10 mineral water, P5 1/2 rice, P15 viand...x 22 days): P660.00
Cellphone credits (let's face it, this IS important these days): P100
Electric bill: P500
Water bill: P500
Apartment rent: P3000
LPG tank (for cooking): P500
Rice for a family of four: P600
Grocery for a family of four: P4000

TOTAL: P10,212
Budget left for other expenses: P1,288

___________

P1,288. Can our fresh graduate manage to put something in the bank with this remaining amount? What if, God forbid, someone gets sick in his household? What about the expenses he incurs just to get to those government institutions that provide medical assistance? How about his siblings' tuition fee and daily school allowance?

I may be wrong with my calculations. I may have underestimated or overestimated this and that. But the figures I presented were based on how tight I could be if my dad did not have thrice weekly dialysis treatments or if we're not shelling out more than P15,000 monthly on his medicines (and that's with the 20% Senior Citizen discount already!).


So what about our medical professionals?

In the Philippines, private hospitals offer between P6,000-P10,000 a month as a starting salary for its nurses. Public/government hospitals pay a little more and with great benefits but are still no different or better than our P13,000 example earlier.

Doctors, in the meantime, ordinarily receive P500 per patient. Big, huh? Wait 'til you find out about just how much is the chunk that goes to their overhead expenses (utility bills, assistants' salary, etc.).

Comparing these figures to what medical professionals receive abroad, it is no wonder that though we have a surplus of graduates in the fields of health and medicine, we still have a shortage of applicants willing to receive such meager amounts.

In Canada, a typical 8-hour shift of a fresh nursing graduate renders a salary of P9,000 per day. Multiply that with a 22-day work month and deduct the taxes (let's be generous, this country is rich, anyway: 40%) and you still get a net pay that's more than enough to afford families comfortable lives.

Many will surely find tons of loopholes in my argument. I know, for sure, I'll get bombarded with cost of living comparisons, etc., but hey I'm not stupid. If my parents scrimped and saved and even sacrificed their own needs just so I could be a nurse or a doctor or even just an ordinary college graduate, it's them that I would first think about in terms of finding a job. This is not to say I would also not think of myself. I would. And if that meant a job abroad that affords me a better life for myself and for my family, I'd say, why not?

It's disappointing that many UP students and graduates come up a little too short-sighted with the reality that's facing many of their fellowmen. Sure I can't expect or convince everyone to side with me but I beg my fellow alumni to think about this:

UP, along with other state universities and colleges in the country, exists mainly to provide the best possible education for poor but deserving students. It recognizes that not all students who go to UP are rich or at least have a family that's financially capable enough to support their kids through two (or five) years' worth of RSAs after graduation. Not everyone can afford to hop from one company to another, test the career waters and meditate about their true purpose in life. Not everyone can choose the path of the righteous and the ideal over the path of the practical if their family's life is already at stake.

Lest we forget, the university hymn, "UP Naming Mahal" (UP Beloved) talks about vows of being a loyal son (or daughter...to the country) wherever one may be. And I quote:


Filipino lyricsOriginal English lyrics
i.i.
U.P. naming mahal, pamantasang hirangU.P. beloved, thou Alma Mater dear
Ang tinig namin, sana'y inyong dingginFor thee united, our joyful voices hear
Malayong lupain, amin mang maratingFar tho we wander, o'er island yonder
Di rin magbabago ang damdaminLoyal thy sons we'll ever be
Di rin magbabago ang damdamin.Loyal thy sons we'll ever be.


To say that if one did not wish to serve the country after [graduation], one should just go to private colleges and universities is not, in any way, fair. Again, we have poor students who do not have this choice. We also have people who received their degrees from private learning institutions who do extremely well in serving the country. Hopefully, we do not fail to realize or accept that serving the country is not limited to staying.


We can be honorable men and women, excellent in our fields, wherever we may be. Just look at our Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs). They're one of the biggest boosters to our economy.


MAIN LIBRARY. Known as "Bulwagan ng Dangal"
or Hall of Honor in the university.
We can choose to be practical and ideal at the same time by refusing to taint our images with unlawful acts that could be the source of shame not just for our loved ones but for our fellow Filipinos alike. We can choose to be better students  -  attending lectures instead of cutting classes to join extracurricular activities and actually passing our subjects instead of abusing the Maximum Residency Rule (overstaying, hello!). We can think of those who have it harder than us but are actually as deserving as us in the role that we play as state university students and graduates. And then when all is said and done, we can choose to not forget: To return to the country to help and to contribute.

Friday, June 10, 2011

A Weight (Gain) Story

A week ago, I blogged about my weight loss journey - how I was of almost beauty pageant proportions to how I gained and lost and gained some more. Let me close that topic with this blog on tips and criticisms.

Just a few minutes ago, I made the mistake of sharing to a friend that I gained 3 lbs over the last 2+ days. Her first comment was an "oh". Since I learned overtime to expect reactions of such from her and since I also had already psyched myself for like reactions, I told her to not be disappointed with a smiley face (I mean that smiley face this time!). Thanks to a pep talk from my husband earlier, I was so positive that since I've already proven how easy it is [now] for me to lose weight, I would lose it in two or three days.

But now I'm sure you're asking yourselves, what happened?

On Wednesday at 8 PM, an hour before my usual time at the gym, I realized that I was unprepared for the following day's medical exam at St. Luke's Extension Clinic in Ermita for my US Immigrant Visa requirement. I needed four more pictures and Megamall on weekdays (except Fridays) closes at 9! It was raining really hard and the traffic on Shaw Boulevard was horrible. I was doing complicated mathematics in my mind: I knew I had to be at St. Luke's before 6 AM and it's a must to not delay the medicals any further. I even had to push it from my preferred schedule of June 15 to June 10 because of my monthly visitor (can't have my medicals with a period and waiting for four days for it to end and waiting for a week more before I can undergo any exam would endanger my ability to comply with this requirement before my July 5 interview).

To make the long story short, for the first time in 10 days, I did not go to the gym.

It's hard to forgive myself but I managed to shake it off in anticipation of the following day's activity. Complying with this requirement was more important than sulking over something I failed to do, that of which I trust I could do again and immediately at that!

Upon going home, I tried but failed to sleep immediately. I must have dozed off between 12:30 AM and 2:30 AM only to be awoken by my alarm clock at 3:45 AM. So much for amping up my metabolism with complete eight hours' worth of sleep. I did not bother having breakfast at home. I just grabbed an apple, Bearbrand sterilized milk and bottled water. In the cab, I was munching on the apple I took with me, trying to convince myself that it's okay to have a heavy breakfast (rice) with milk since 1) we can't take food with us to St. Luke's; and 2) it's advisable to have one as there's no fasting requirement and that there's going to be a looooong series of waiting, waiting and more waiting (St. Luke's does medicals for four embassies thus the "before 6 AM" statement of mine earlier!).

One huge mistake: I assumed there were good restaurants near St. Luke's. Since my stomach was grumbling and the clinic's about to open in less than 30 minutes, I just bought what the only carinderia there has to offer: one piece longganisa, 1/2 piece of meat loaf & one cup of rice. Pork. Great. Just great.

After the waiting, sitting, waiting, sitting routine ended at 11 AM, and when I finally managed, at almost 12, to go somewhere else where decent meals are served , I was already so hungry. Five hours between meals with not enough "burning" in between! Medical experts and dietitians say that in order to manage a healthy weight and increase one's metabolism, one must eat five small meals a day or at least "frequently" in small proportions. I know a former training colleague who gets hungry every two hours - she's still of nice proportions even with such.

Going home was not, in any way, easier. I took a beating from myself that I had a heavy breakfast and a heavy lunch that I resolved not to have dinner anymore. I was also sick of paranoia because at St. Luke's, I sat beside a woman whose x-ray scan two months ago delayed her US trip. It was only on the following day that I'd get my results (Yes! I needed to return!) so the paranoia left me exhausted with only a few hours of sleep.

The following day, I already resolved to eating at home. It was still a heavy breakfast as there's another round of waiting at St. Luke's. True enough, when I arrived before 8 AM, I had to wait until past 10 AM for my immunization. When I got my FOUR vaccinations, I had two more wait periods to face, each no less than 30 minutes long: one for the signing of the results and another for the release of my vaccination and x-ray documents. But at least my lungs are clear! No more two-month delay because of health concerns!

At 12 noon, I took a cab from Ermita to Ali Mall in Cubao. My mother-in-law invited me to attend mass and have lunch with her for her birthday. The lack of sleep was starting to kick in and I tried to fight a number of times the urge to doze off. The cab driver was quite creepy and my left arm was starting to hurt. It was painful that I could not move it up. Luckily, I still managed to catch the priest's sermon and gleefully made my way to lunch with her, her sister and my brother-in-law.

When I got home at 4 PM, I went straight to bed and caught two hours' worth of zzzz's. I woke up determined to go back to the gym and to go back to my usual dinner of oatmeal. The last one I managed to do and with gusto! The first though? Well, I chose not to. I wanted a combination of weight/strength training and cardios but my hurting arm said no. Doing cardios alone was not okay as I prefer moving my arms rigorously both on the treadmill during brisk/power walking and on the ellipticals and/or crossramp. Besides, hubby was confident I could lose the additional poundage fast. :)

And then came the "you-burst-my-bubble" in today's episode of my weight loss journey. Yes, it's back to this friend of mine. Her "oh" was followed by "I just could not believe that you'd gain weight that fast". It was softened by her "Could it be your metabolism?". Then it was jabbed by a "That lifestyle ruins your diet. I hope your stomach can soon get used to eating a smaller meal so that it won't get hungry all the time."

Huh? HUH?!!!!

She practically said "matakaw ako", probably without really thinking about it. Wisecracks like that, whether said in jest or meant well, rub me off the wrong way. I even once argued (not "fought", just to be clear) with hubby that though I don't deny succumbing to eating a lot in the US, I am generally not "matakaw". A certain uncle's wife used to be the head dietitian of Medical City in Ortigas. She, along with a number of dietitians I know and medical journals I read, said that having three cups of rice a day (one per meal) is just "right". There's the option to cut the serving to lose weight fast but that the option to cut all the carbs (Atkin's Diet) can lead immediately to an exhausted-looking pin thin frame. This is the reason why I switched to my diet of oatmeal with chicken or fish twice a day and at least one cup of rice during lunch just to cut the cravings. I know it works for me because it appeals to my taste. I also know, however, that there's no fool-proof way to lose weight: what works for one may not work on another.

Going to the word "diet". I notice, when most Filipinos say "diet", they immediately mean cutting food intake to lose weight. This thinking, however, places an ill connotation on the word especially for those battling weight problems. It's like a villain pretending to be an ally or worse, a means of torture. Technically, it takes a lot of people away from the real meaning of the word. Wikipedia defines it as "...the sum of food consumed by a person or other organism." Merriam Webster, on the other hand, puts it as "habitual nourishment". For me, it's simply "what we regularly/normally eat".

That being said, when I say my "diet" is oatmeal twice a day and rice for lunch, I am talking about what I regularly or normally eat and not what I do -  or cut  -  to lose weight. This is the language trainer in me despising that a certain word is taken to mean another. This is the person in me who has weight problems, the woman in me who's always thought of as already a mom (so much for me wanting to have a baby already) just because her boobs are big, loathing statements like "mag-diet ka" (go on a diet).

Tyra Banks  -  who was once a size 10, a size considered "too much" by the modelling industry for her 5'10 frame  -  spoke that in whatever size she is, she believes she's still beautiful. She lost the weight but she's not afraid to indulge with "cheaties" every now and then to reward one's self (America's Next Top Model Cycle 16). I love what she said because it's basically similar to allowing one's self to let loose and let go, to go on a "vacation" if and when needed and then to go back to "real life" that's full of strict schedules and disciplined routines. Plus, it doesn't hurt that Tyra never judged anyone with weight issues on her show. She was always careful in providing constructive feedback.

My jewelry design mentor and model, Cielo Fronteras once posted a Facebook status saying that before we judge one person badly because of his/her weight, we have to consider a number of factors (body frame, bone structure, thyroid issues, illnesses, culture, etc.) why this person is such. Our comments and criticisms may even do more harm than good.

Let me end this blog by saying that I'll lose the 3+ lbs in four-five days. WATCH ME.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Reproductive Health Bill Sponsorship Speech by Sen. Pia Cayetano

Lists down all the reasons why I am for the Reproductive Health Bill.

____________________________________________________________________

SB No. 2865, Committee Report No. 49

“The Reproductive Health Act”


June 7, 2011


By: SEN. PIA S. CAYETANO
A. INTRODUCTION
Mr. President, distinguished colleagues, on Wednesday last week, I sponsored Senate Bill No. 2849 which seeks to amend the PhilHealth law with the end in view of making quality and essential health care services affordable and accessible to all Filipinos, especially the underprivileged. As I said in my sponsorship speech, this bill is part of a whole package of reforms from your Health Committee.
It is again my honor to stand before you today to present on the floor an important addition to such package of health reforms.
Mr. President, as a woman and as a legislator, I am pleased to sponsor Senate Bill No. 2865 entitled, “AN ACT PROVIDING FOR A NATIONAL POLICY ON REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT”.
B. WHAT THE BILL IS NOT
Mr. President, because of all the misinformation regarding the contents and objectives of the bill, let me start by what this bill is NOT.
1. This is NOT a bill that promotes or legalizes abortion. On the contrary, it is for the protection of the unborn along with its mother.
2. This is NOT a bill that imposes one mode of family planning method on all. Every person will be allowed to choose the method suitable to his needs and based on his religious beliefs.
3. This is NOT a bill that imposes a certain family size.
4. This bill will NOT solve all the problems of our country. Like most of the bills filed in the Senate, it is just one measure that will address a particular problem. In this case, it is the reproductive health of all Filipinos, particularly the women and her child.
5. This is NOT a bill that will teach 9 year olds how to use a condom. Neither does it promote sexual activity among the youth or promote promiscuity among adults.
C. WHAT THIS BILL IS ABOUT
This bill aims to:
1. Save the lives of the mother and the unborn.
2. Provide Filipinos with information on their reproductive health so they can make informed and intelligent decisions.
3. Provide Filipinos with access to health care facilities and skilled health professionals.

Mr. President, this bill seeks to acknowledge that women have reproductive health care needs that are distinct to women and to provide measures to address such needs. In the same way that the PhilHealth bill seeks to provide affordable and accessible quality and essential health care services to all, this bill seeks to provide affordable and accessible quality and essential reproductive health care services to Filipinos, particularly the underprivileged women.
D. FEATURES OF THE BILL
1. Access to skilled health professionals before, during, and after delivery
Mr. President, the bill aspires to address the number of mothers who die while giving birth and the high incident of infant mortality which are also connected with maternal health.

At present, the data we have tell us that we have 162 mothers dying for every 100,000 live births. What does this mean? This tells us that in Southeast Asia, we have one of the highest maternal mortality rates. Our rate is 162, compare this to 110 in Thailand, 62 in Malaysia and 14 in Singapore.

We are not on track, Mr. President, in achieving our Millennium Development Goal No.5. Our goal, is in fact, to enable all pregnant women to have access to pre-natal care, to be attended to by a skilled health professional while giving birth, and to be given post-natal care for her and her newborn.

Mr. President, no mother should die while bringing forth new life into this world. However, the depressing reality is, as I said, 12 mothers die for every 100,000 births. These are the number of newborns robbed of a mother’s love and care just when they need it the most. And because of that special bond between mother and child which begins from pregnancy, a child who loses a mother at childbirth is ten times more likely to perish.

We all know that the mother is considered the light of every home. Who of us would wish upon a child that he would grow up without a mother?

Mr. President, aside from the death of the mother, the death of a child is no less devastating. However, another sad reality is that for every minute, three babies are born, and for every 1000 babies born, thirty-three (33) die before reaching age five (5).

2. Establishment and upgrading of facilities and training of skilled health professionals

Because the common causes of maternal mortality are highly preventable, Section 6 calls for the establishment and upgrading of facilities with adequate and qualified personnel, equipment and supplies in every province or city to be able to provide emergency obstetric and newborn care. Section 12 further necessitates each congressional district to acquire a mobile health care service in the form of a van or other means of transportation to ensure the provision of health care goods and services even to people living in remote areas.

To further address the dearth in medical personnel in certain localities, Sections 5 and 14 direct the hiring of an adequate number of skilled health professionals such as doctors, nurses and midwives and the training of barangay health workers (BHWs) in each respective local government unit (LGU).
3. Addressing HIV and other Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Mr. President, I beg the Body’s indulgence, but allow me to repeat. Imagine that out of 63 countries, the Philippines is one of seven countries where HIV is increasing. This is also embarrassing because we are aligned with such countries that years ago were so much backward compared to us, not just in health care but in economic development.

Anyway, to address this problem, Section 11 provides that all serious and life threatening reproductive health conditions such as HIV and AIDS shall be given the maximum benefits under PhilHealth, such as the provision of Anti-Retroviral Medicines (ARVs).

4. Access to different family planning methods
The poor Filipino couples are the real beneficiaries of this bill, Mr. President. The privileged can either afford to have larger families or afford reproductive health services by specialized doctors. It is a sad fact that this is not the same for the poor. Studies have shown that many of them would prefer smaller families than what they have. In fact, every year, there are over half a million clandestine abortions happening in our country primarily brought about by unplanned or unwanted pregnancies. Most of these women are the poorest of the poor who have no access to reproductive health care services, including family planning. Stories range from women jumping off coconut trees to dislodge babies from their bellies to teenagers inserting hook shaped wires inside their vaginas to scrape off fetuses to even married women bleeding on makeshift beds of “abortionists” — all forced to undergo the pain and perils of abortion because they do not want, and cannot afford to have, a baby. But surveys and my personal visits to the grassroots all over the country have shown that more women want the information and services available for them to plan their pregnancies. Indeed, this is the better way out than enduring the immense pain and possible bleeding to death from an abortion and the loss of a child.
Mr. President, I just want to make this clear. Senate Bill No. 2865 does not, in any way, compel any individual to choose one form of family planning method over the other, or even to use any family planning method at all. The guiding principles under Section 3 merely seeks to equip all Filipinos with accurate and sufficient information on family planning methods necessary for them to make an informed choice as to how many children they want, when they want it and what family planning method to use, if any. The end goal, Mr. President, is to provide all Filipinos with information and access, without bias, to quality reproductive health care services and supplies essential to the promotion of every person’s right to health.
5. Age- and Development- Appropriate Reproductive Health Education
All that I have discussed merely scratch the surface of the problem. To eradicate maternal and infant deaths, lessen unwanted pregnancies and prevent the infection and transmission of HIV and AIDS, we should address the root cause of the problem — lack of education and awareness.
Mr. President, knowledge is the best tool in our deadly battle against these evils. It is for this reason that Section 13 provides for reproductive health education to be taught by adequately trained teachers in formal and non-formal educational systems and integrated in age and development appropriate subjects. It is also important to note that the bill mandates that minors are taught the value of healthy relationships including how abstinence is still the best form of protection from pregnancy and diseases. Mr. President, it is not true that nine-year old children will be taught how to use contraceptives. This is not age appropriate and that will never be allowed.
Mr. President, allow me to give an example. Even a three-year-old has adequate intelligence to understand a certain amount of reproductive health education. When a three-year-old has a mother who is pregnant, the three-year-old will ask, “Why is your stomach big?” Do we tell the child that the mother swallowed a basketball? No. But then many families do say that to a three-year-old.
But the truth is, we are supposed to tell the child that mommy is about to have a baby; that she will have a baby brother or sister. And, if the child progresses to ask the next question- how did the baby get there-then there are age-appropriate answers unless we prefer that our youth grow up thinking that they came out of bamboo trees because they will learn this in, I think it is Kasysayan, in one of their Filipino classes where they are taught Filipino mythology.
Do we want our children to think that they came out of bamboo trees until they are 21 years old? That is the choice that we face if we refuse to acknowledge that there are many ways of teaching age-appropriate reproductive health education.
And if I can just quickly point out some of the topics that should be included, these include values formation, knowledge and skill, and self-protection against discrimination and sexual abuse and violence. I need to point out that many children, especially those in single homes, especially in the squatter areas where we have multiple families living in one home are victims of child abuse.
Teen pregnancy as I mentioned earlier in my speech, abstinence will be taught as the primary mode of protecting one’s self from pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections.
And the list goes on including physical, social and emotional changes in adolescents. There are stories where adolescents commit suicide because they do not understand the changes happening in their bodies.
6. Women’s rights and children’s rights and responsible teenage behavior.
Time and again, we have seen news reports about a 14-year-old teenager raping a six-year-old. And this is why, it is important that these children are taught responsible behavior which, of course, includes not raping a six-year-old.
E. CONSTITUTIONAL BASIS
Mr. President, this bill is grounded on the following Constitutional provisions:
1. Article II Section 15. The State shall protect and promote the right to health of the people and instill health consciousness among them.
2. Article II Section 12. The State … shall equally protect the life of the mother and the life of the unborn from conception….
3. Article II Section 6. The separation of Church and State shall be inviolable. Article III, Section 5. No law shall be made respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. The free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship, without discrimination or preference, shall forever be allowed…
4. Articles VI, VII and VIII all establish the three independent branches of government with their specific mandates.
E.1. On the right to health
Mr. President, I believe the Constitutional right to health needs no more further explanation.
E.2. On the protection of the life of the mother and her child
Mr. President, the health of the mother is intrinsically related to that of her child. Her health before and during pregnancy directly affects her child’s health. Numerous studies have shown that malnourished mothers and those who do not undergo pre-natal care give birth to malnourished and underweight children many of whom die before reaching five.
E.3&4. On the separation of Church and State and the freedom of religion.
Mr. President, we, as Senators have our own personal views and relationship with God. This is a part of who we are. Thus, I do not ask that we separate our moral values from our scrutiny of the bill. I simply ask that we remember that our religious views may be different from our neighbors and we cannot use our legislative seat to deprive a fellow Filipino of his legal and constitutional rights to exercise his religion, to make choices within the legal boundaries, but based on his own religion and NOT ours.
Time and again, the position of the Church has been discussed as a basis for not supporting this bill, but as Senators, we are tasked to separate our religious beliefs when they interfere with matters that belong to the State. I simply ask that we recognize the right of every citizen to make choices regarding one’s reproductive health based on one’s own conscience, moral and religious views.
Just because we are a predominantly Catholic country doesn’t mean we can impose Catholic dogma on every Filipino. This is the job of the clergy and they can do as they please in the Church and its activities with their flock. But, in the halls of Congress, the Constitution is clear, – - there must be a separation of Church and State. If for the sake of argument, 99.9% of Filipinos were Catholic and every single one express a certain view, I would still be standing here today to fight for the rights of that 1 Filipino who is entitled to choices based on his religion and not the religion of the majority because that is the mandate of our Constitution — that we make laws respecting the freedom of religion of all without the Church interfering with matters that should be left with the State.
Following the same argument, if 99.9 % of the population belonged to a different religion, I would still stand up for that 1 Catholic to ensure that his rights were protected and that services and facilities were available to allow him to make choices based on his beliefs. Those are the principles of separation of Church and State and the freedom of religion.
Does this now mean that we have no boundaries? That because we all have different views, the free flow of drugs and devices that may in fact be harmful to both mother and her unborn, are now to be allowed?
Of course not, Mr. President. We are still guided by our Constitution. And clearly we are to protect the life of the mother and the unborn from conception. Thus, knowingly taking a drug or performing an act after conception with the intention of aborting the fetus would be a violation of the Constitution and existing laws. And that brings me to my next point.
E.5. On the role of the executive, specifically the Department of Health through the Food and Drug Adminstration (FDA)
Mr. President, some groups would have the Senate arrogate upon itself the power to define, classify, allow or ban contraceptives. But this is clearly the jurisdiction of the FDA, a government agency that falls under the DOH which is part of the Executive branch. It is the FDA that has been tasked by law, among others to determine the efficacy of all drugs and medical devices, define what are abortifacients are and how their use is to be regulated. It is the entity with the scientific and technical ability to do that job.
So why not simply put a statement in the bill banning all abortifacients? Would that not simplify this debate? It sounds tempting, Mr. President. But I humbly submit it will not simplify this debate. Why? Because medicine is a technical field. And without the appropriate scientific background, we, as legislators who are not medical experts, could easily make mistakes and kill mothers and their babies instead of saving their lives.
Allow me to explain. A careless phrase like “no drug known to be an abortifacient will be made available in the Philippines” sounds like a statement we could all support. But what most of us do not understand is the fact that many life-saving drugs are made available to an ailing mother to address her medical condition although there is a possibility that they may be harmful to a pregnant mother and her fetus. Thus, we have for instance, drugs for diseases of the heart, hypertension, seizures, ulcers and even acne, all of which are to be taken only under doctors’ prescription and supervision precisely because of their harmful effects.
Making a blanket statement banning all medicines classified as abortifacients would put all these mothers and their children’s lives in greater danger. For decades, these mothers have relied on these medicines to keep them alive. I would like to give another example. A known abortifacient, misoprostol commonly known as cytotec, is one of the drugs that can save a mother’s life. I am talking about a mother who just gave birth but has internal hemorrhage and in danger of bleeding to death. Her child has been born. Her child will live but she will die without this drug to stop her bleeding. Are we now to ban the use of this drug? Are we now to say that because it could possibly be used as an abortifacient, it could possibly be abused, this mother must now die despite giving birth to a healthy baby?
Mr. President, we clearly need to make distinctions. These life saving drugs SHOULD NOT BE USED on any circumstances for purposes of carrying out an abortion. But under strict guidelines by the FDA, they can be used by a health practitioner to save a mother’s life.
F. CONCLUSION
Mr. President, I appeal to my colleagues for patience and understanding and above all, an open mind. Because although reproductive health affects both men and women, it is primarily a women’s issue.
1. Men do not die from childbirth, but women and their newborn do.
2. Men are not affected by the deadly hpv virus – I am not talking about HIV, I am talking about hpv, which leads to cervical cancer – women do. Men merely pass along this virus to women through unsafe and unprotected sex.
3. Men infected with HIV likewise pass it on to women (although this virus can be passed both ways), but when a man transmits it to a woman, it can then be passed on to the unborn child as well.
4. And finally, no man can claim that he has experienced the pain of choosing to end the life of the unborn baby in his womb. But half a million mothers in this country do that every year.
Mr. President, I believe the options are simple. Do we provide the facilities and the professional services that women need? Do we want to equip our women with the means to plan their family using natural or modern family planning methods, as they so choose within the boundaries provided by our Constitution and laws, all of which, I repeat, are subject to the scrutiny by our FDA? Or do we want our women to live in the dark ages, unable to make informed and intelligent choices about planning their family? And worse, resorting to abortions when they find themselves carrying an unplanned child.
Mr. President, if one woman is given the ability to make informed choices and access to services and facilities, that changes her life and that of her family. Why is this privilege limited to the rich? Every woman deserves this as a matter of right…
The statistics I mentioned earlier are not just mere numbers; these are real people with families orphaned by the loss of a loved one, a mother or a child. The ball is now in our hands, Mr. President, and we cannot stand idly by as these deaths continue in our country. We have the power to end this. We have the power to provide poor Filipinos sufficient information for the exercise of their reproductive rights. We have the power to put an end to these problems. Let us show the Filipino people that we have not only the compassion but also the moral commitment and the political will to do something to prevent these tragedies from befalling upon families.
Mr. President, the bill is a work in progress. It is not carved in stone. And I welcome the inputs of my colleagues and look forward to the debates where issues and concerns can be threshed out. I only ask once more for compassion as each of you to study this bill.
Thank you very much.