1.Analysis of the Capacities of Health Facilities in the Eastern Visayas Region based on Health Care Provider Network Service Delivery Guidelines.
Leizel P. Lagrada ; Romulo F. Nieva ; Alvin Duke R. Sy ; Kim Leonard G. Dela Luna ; Darrlyn Normaine P. Bernabe ; Fernando B. Garcia ; He Yeon Ji ; Romil Jeffrey R. Juson ; Jasper M. Maglinab ; Jihwan Jeon
Acta Medica Philippina 2026;60(3):13-26
OBJECTIVES
Timely access to appropriate levels of care is essential for improving maternal, newborn,
and child health outcomes. To address persistent service delivery fragmentation and strengthen referral systems, the Philippine Department of Health issued Administrative Order 2020-0019 to guide the design of Health Care Provider Networks (HCPNs) under the Universal Health Care Act of 2019. This study assessed the extent to which sixteen municipalities across four provinces in Eastern Visayas comply with the HCPN service delivery guidelines in the context of maternal and newborn care.
The study employed a descriptive cross-sectional mixed-methods design, utilizing structured facility checklists to assess compliance with HCPN standards. Qualitative data were gathered through key informant interviews and focus group discussions with purposively selected stakeholders—decision makers, health personnel, and mothers—to contextualize findings. A three-lever framework for integrated care (policy, operational, and cross- cutting) guided the analysis
RESULTSThe findings revealed significant gaps between the current capacities of study health facilities and the requirements outlined in the HCPN guidelines. Major gaps included (1) weak cooperative governance mechanisms to support network-wide coordination; (2) limited systematic linkages between facilities, including fragmented referral protocols and non-interoperable health information systems; (3) inadequate investments in infrastructure, health human resources, and medical commodities; and (4) absence of performance monitoring systems across HCPNs.
CONCLUSION
Human ; Information Systems ; Occupational Groups ; Referral And Consultation ; Universal Health Care ; Delivery Of Health Care
2.The analysis of the provider, payer, and regulator stakeholders' understanding and acceptance of the Universal Healthcare Law in three provinces in the Philippines: A qualitative study using a content analysis approach.
Edwin M. Mercado ; Hannah N. Gilbert ; Jose V. Tecson III ; Chunling Lu
Acta Medica Philippina 2026;60(1):7-21
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
In 2018, the Philippine Congress passed the Universal Healthcare (UHC) Law and its implementing rules which mandated the enrollment of all Filipinos to PhilHealth, the national social health insurance corporation. The Department of Health (DOH) and PhilHealth will leverage their strategic purchasing power by affiliating Health Care Provider Networks (HCPNs), established within the geopolitical boundaries of a province or a highly urbanized city, through service level agreements. This study aims to shed light on what is expected from providers, payers, and regulators to implement UHC successfully.
METHODSThe researchers conducted an inductive, content analytic qualitative study guided by the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Building Blocks Framework to determine the understanding and acceptance of the implementing rules of the UHC Law and the perceived barriers and enablers from the provider, payer, and regulator stakeholders in three provinces in the Philippines. Purposive sampling was utilized to provide the best representation across different economic and physical settings. A content analysis was done through an inductive process of coding concepts, which was the basis for categories grouped and matched deductively with the WHO framework. This formed the broader sub-themes and were used for the final data interpretation.
RESULTSA total of 16 focus group discussions (FGDs) and nine in-depth interviews (IDIs) were performed with 84 participants. Inductive thematic analysis of categories and subcategories showed that the participants support the goals and objectives of the UHC Law. Still, perceived barriers refer to the lack of and improper use of funds, the need to clarify the implementing guidelines, and the role of politics. The participants indicated that solidarity and social connectedness with health system adaptability and resilience are enablers for the success of UHC reforms.
CONCLUSIONProposals to mitigate the barriers include expanding the funding source, clarifying rules on the f inancial management system, and providing guidelines on health delivery integration to ensure access to patient care. Decentralization with autonomy will allow the stakeholders to align health programs with local needs. Proper representation in decision-making bodies is desirable to establish strong community involvement and solidarity. Resilience and adaptability based on a feedback loop are imperative.
Human ; Universal Health Care ; Health Financing ; Healthcare Financing ; Philippines
3.Screening and management of bladder and bowel dysfunction among toilet trained children in a general pediatric outpatient clinic of a Tertiary Hospital using standard urotherapy: Prospective interventional study.
Melanie O. UY MATIAO ; Maria Rosario F. CABANSAG ; Remedios D. CHAN ; Maria Margarita M. ROMANO ; Jemely M. PUNZALAN ; Dennis FLORES ; David C T. BOLONG
Journal of Medicine University of Santo Tomas 2026;10(1):1862-1872
OBJECTIVES
This study determined the prevalence of BBD among toilet-trained children attending a tertiary hospital’s pediatric outpatient clinic, and to evaluate the effectiveness of standard urotherapy among affected children.
METHODSA prospective interventional study was conducted among 144 toilet-trained children aged 7 to 12 years seen at the University of Santo Tomas Hospital outpatient clinic from August 2025 to September 2025. Sociodemographic data were collected, and BBD was screened using the validated Filipino version of the Dysfunctional Voiding Symptom Scores (DVSS) questionnaire. Children with BBD underwent standard urotherapy, which included behavioral and lifestyle interventions such as timed voiding, adequate hydration, constipation management and proper voiding posture. DVSS assessments were repeated at two and four weeks.
RESULTSThe overall prevalence of BBD was 22.9% (33 of 144). BBD was significantly more prevalent among females (31.88%) than males (14.67%) (adjusted OR = 2.96, 95% CI: 1.28–6.86; p = 0.011). At baseline, children with BBD had significantly higher mean total DVSS scores (9.15 ± 3.64) compared to those without (2.01 ± 1.80, pCONCLUSION
Standard urotherapy proved effective in reducing symptom scores within two weeks and resulted in complete clinical resolution after four weeks among those who continued therapy. Routine screenings for BBD using DVSS and early initiation of standard urotherapy in pediatric outpatient settings are recommended to prevent complications and improve children’s urinary and bowel health.
Human ; Child: 6-12 Yrs Old ; World Health Organization ; Outpatient Clinics, Hospital ; Mass Screening ; Tertiary Care Centers ; Constipation ; Ambulatory Care Facilities
4.Providing universal health care access to Filipinos region-wide using back propagation and recurrent neural networks for finding optimal locations to place rural health unit facilities in the Philippines.
Martina Therese R. Reyes ; Maria Regina Justina E. Estuar ; Jann Railey E. Montalan
Acta Medica Philippina 2026;60(2):7-14
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
Access to healthcare remains a challenge in most areas in the Philippines. Fifty-three percent (53%) of the Philippine population do not have access to a rural health unit (RHU) within a 30-minute travel t ime. As a response, the Department of Health (DOH) needs to construct an additional 2400 RHUs by 2025. This paper uses the Philippine Health Facility Development Plan 2020-2040 (PHFDP) as a reference to present a solution for locating sites for RHU placement in under-served areas using neural networks to meet the 30-minute travel time by maximizing population accessibility.
METHODSRHU accessibility was measured using geographic attributes as inputs to a back propagation neural network (BPNN) and a recurrent neural network (RNN): (1) land coverage and hazard data, representing geographical limitations; (2) population density and distribution, indicating demand for healthcare services; and (3) infrastructure-related features, such as road networks, points of interest, and the locations of existing RHUs, which influence healthcare accessibility. The models were trained to identify underserved areas and were implemented on a nationwide scale, excluding NCR, to locate candidate areas to increase population access to the new RHUs. The models were validated using a healthcare facility accessibility index (HCFAI) to assess RHU coverage improvement.
RESULTSThe BPNN showed stronger generalization across regions, achieving 79.1% average accuracy in distinguishing low from high accessible areas on Region 1 and identifying 1668 out of 3305 locations in the region as candidate sites. The RNN, better capturing unique regional characteristics, required separate training: 77.2% average accuracy on Region 1, identifying 1593 candidate sites. Our findings suggest expanding the use of land improves population access to healthcare facilities. Both models found more than the needed number of RHUs by 2040. The BPNN was more consistent than RNN to improve a region’s overall accessibility by increasing the HCFAI. The BPNN can increase population access to an RHU from 2.5-98.5% from its original population with access to an RHU.
CONCLUSIONThe study demonstrates the usage of geographic attributes and neural networks to improve healthcare accessibility. The BPNN and RNN are adequate algorithms to find under-served areas and candidate sites for RHU construction to maximize population accessibility. The HCFAI metric validates the locations to highlight which neural network maximizes more of the region’s populat ion. The study contributes to ongoing efforts to improve healthcare infrastructure and accessibility, offering datadriven recommendations for RHU locations.
Human ; Universal Health Care ; Rural Health ; Delivery Of Health Care ; Health Services Needs And Demand ; Health Facilities ; Algorithms ; Back
5.Quality of care among patients with acute heart failure at the emergency room and adherence of physicians at the University of the Philippines – Philippine General Hospital to the division of cardiovascular medicine – heart failure pathway:A retrospective cohort study.
Mark John D. Sabando ; Felix Eduardo R. Punzalan ; Frances Dominique V. Ho ; Tam Adrian P. Aya-ay ; Kevin Paul Da. Enriquez ; Marie Kirk A. Maramara ; Ronald Allan B. Roderos ; Lauren Kay M. Evangelista
Acta Medica Philippina 2026;60(2):22-32
OBJECTIVES
Clinical pathways (CPs) ensure adherence to heart failure (HF) management guidelines. To optimize quality care in a low resource setting, an evidence-based care pathway for the management of acute HF was implemented at the emergency department (ED) of the Philippine General Hospital (PGH), the designated national tertiary hospital and referral center. This study aimed to describe the characteristics of adults with acute HF admitted at the ED and evaluate the quality of care they received, measured using physician adherence to the hospital’s acute heart failure CP.
METHODSThis was a retrospective, descriptive cohort study. We reviewed the inpatient charts of all adult patients with acute HF admitted to the ED of the PGH and referred to the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine between December 1, 2022 and May 31, 2023. Quality of care was assessed based on adherence to quality indicators adapted from routine and conditional order sets detailed in the pathway. Descriptive statistics was utilized to describe patient characteristics, quality of care, and outcomes.
RESULTSTwo hundred thirty-six (236) patients were included, with a mean age of 51.8 years. Majority were male (53.4%); hypertension (61.4%) and ischemic heart disease (53.8%) were the most common comorbidities, and infection the most common precipitant of decompensation (60.6%). There were optimal adherence rates to routine orders, which included referrals to Internal Medicine and Cardiology, baseline vital signs monitoring, fluid intake and output monitoring, chest radiograph, complete blood count, blood urea nitrogen, sodium, potassium, prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time, arterial blood gas, urinalysis, and N-terminal pro b-type natriuretic peptide. Conditional orders, such as oxygen support, focused echocardiography, thyroid - stimulating hormone, and the use of vasopressors, diuretics, and venous thromboembolism prophylactic agents, were optimally performed when warranted. However, we noted suboptimal adherence to certain resource-intensive conditional orders, such as hourly monitoring of urine output (61.4%), hooking to cardiac monitor (53.8%), and performance of 12-lead ECG within 10 minutes (56.8%). Further, only 43.9% of patients were referred to the intensive care unit. Troponin I, calcium, magnesium, and albumin were ordered in excess.
CONCLUSIONOverall adherence rate of physicians to the hospital’s Acute Heart Failure Pathway was satisfactory. Work is needed to improve adherence to hourly urine output monitoring, consistent hooking to cardiac monitor, and timely performance of 12-lead ECG – an effort that begins with expanding in-hospital diagnostic equipment and human resource supply. We recommend continuous pathway implementation with periodic evaluation and stakeholder feedback to further improve quality of care.
Human ; Male ; Female ; Middle Aged: 45-64 Yrs Old ; Adult ; Albumins ; Blood ; Blood Urea Nitrogen ; Calcium ; Cardiology ; Chart ; Charts ; Cohort Studies ; Critical Care ; Critical Pathways ; Diagnostic Equipment ; Disease ; Diuretics ; Echocardiography ; Electrocardiography ; Emergencies ; Emergency Service, Hospital ; Equipment And Supplies ; Evaluation Studies As Topic ; Feedback ; Heart ; Heart Diseases ; Heart Failure ; Hormones ; Hospitals ; Hospitals, General ; Humans ; Hypertension ; Indicators And Reagents ; Infection ; Infections ; Inpatients ; Intensive Care Units ; Internal Medicine ; Lead ; Magnesium ; Male ; Medicine ; Myocardial Ischemia ; Natriuretic Peptide, Brain ; Natriuretic Peptides ; Nitrogen ; Overall ; Oxygen ; Partial Thromboplastin Time ; Patients ; Peptides ; Philippines ; Physicians ; Potassium ; Prothrombin ; Prothrombin Time ; Quality Of Health Care ; Referral And Consultation ; Sodium ; Statistics ; Tertiary Care Centers ; Thorax ; Thromboembolism ; Thromboplastin ; Thyroid Gland ; Time ; Troponin ; Troponin I ; Universities ; Urea ; Urinalysis ; Urine ; Venous Thromboembolism ; Vital Signs ; Work ; Workforce
6.Accessibility and availability of healthcare services in jail facilities among persons deprived of liberty (PDL) in Dumaguete City, Philippines.
Acta Medica Philippina 2026;60(5):17-25
BACKGROUND
Access to prison healthcare and healthcare equity remains poorly understood in the Philippines. With Philippine jail health systems subjected to budgetary restrictions, optimization of efficient mechanisms in healthcare delivery is warranted. This makes understanding how PDLs’ utilization to healthcare services more relavant and of high importance.
OBJECTIVESThis study sought to determine healthcare accessibility and explored what influences healthcare access by Persons Deprived of Liberty (PDLs). Additionally, the study looked into whether healthcare was equally accessible to different PDL subgroups.
METHODSA descriptive-correlational design was employed in recruiting 261 PDLs utilizing stratified random sampling in two jail facilities in Dumaguete City from May to June 2023. Data on healthcare accessibility and availability from self-report survey questionnaires were analyzed using SPSS version 25.
RESULTSHierarchical linear regression analysis shows that, collectively, predisposing factors (age, sex) F=200.82, enabling resources (availability of health services) F=52.52, and perceived needs (physical activities, sleep, diet, and mental health) F=30.24 significantly predict healthcare accessibility, having the availability of healthcare services as the strongest predictor with an R2 change of 43.7% followed by percieved needs (3.9%) and predisposing factor (1.4%), respectively. Furthermore, ordinal logistic regression analysis shows that healthcare by age groups 18-34 (OR=0.379) and 35-54 (OR=0.449) are less likely to be available and accessed than those aged 55 and above. Additionally, availability and accessibility of healthcare are less likely for males (OR=0.24) than females while PDLs with average physical activities (OR=0.87), good (OR=50.7) to average sleep (OR=27.4), and average mental health (OR=0.35) have higher odds of availing and accessing healthcare than their poor counterparts.
CONCLUSIONThese findings indicate that PDLs tend to access healthcare services based predominantly on availability rather than their desired needs warranting strategies that allow catering to a wide range of health needs in PDL subgroups which ultimately lead to better prison health outcomes.
Human ; Health Services Accessibility ; Health Services Needs And Demand ; Health Services ; Health Resources
8.Facility assessment for the implementation of the Philippine package of essential noncommunicable disease interventions (PhilPEN) in primary health care centers in Metro Manila.
Joyce P. Parco ; Kim Leonard G. dela Luna ; Maria Theresa M. Talavera
Acta Medica Philippina 2026;60(6):18-25
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
The Philippine Package of Essential Noncommunicable Disease Interventions (PhilPEN) was introduced by the Department of Health through AO 2012-0029. This is anchored to WHO PEN, a prioritized set of cost-effective interventions that can be carried out to provide an acceptable standard of care at the primary health care level, even in low-resource settings. The study aims to evaluate the availability and adequacy of primary health care facilities in providing the PhilPEN package of interventions using the WHO assessment tool.
METHODSA cross-sectional survey was conducted in 25 randomly selected primary health care facilities in Metro Manila. Data were collected through structured interviews with facility staff and direct observation using a standardized questionnaire aligned with PhilPEN and WHO PEN guidelines. The tool assessed PhilPEN inputs (infrastructure, human resources, basic tools and equipment, essential medicines, record-keeping, financing) and services (risk assessment and screening, early diagnosis and monitoring, treatment and follow-up, counseling, referral of patients).
RESULTSAll facilities met the basic standards for infrastructure, human resources, record keeping, and financing. However, only 40% had all essential medicines, and just 16% had complete tools, including urine ketone/protein test strips. Risk assessment and patient counseling were consistently implemented, but early diagnosis and follow-up services were inconsistent due to training and supply gaps.
CONCLUSIONPrimary health care centers in Metro Manila demonstrate partial readiness for PhilPEN implementation. Gaps in tools, medicines, and protocol availability should be addressed to optimize NCD service delivery.
Human ; Primary Health Care ; Noncommunicable Diseases ; Delivery Of Health Care ; Standard Of Care ; Cardiovascular Diseases
9.Serving communities, shaping systems: The evolving role of public health nurses in the Philippines.
Philippine Journal of Nursing 2025;95(2):12-17
Public health nurses (PHNs) in the Philippines play a vital role in advancing Universal Health Care and Primary Health Care by serving as frontline leaders in community engagement, health promotion, and policy implementation. Despite their contributions, they face persistent challenges, including workforce shortages, wage disparities, hospital-centric education, and fragmented governance. Drawing from a reflexive narrative of community-based practice and organizational experience, this article situated the evolving role of PHNs within broader health systems transformation. The National Association of Public Health Nurses, Inc. (NAPHNI) established a unified platform for advocacy, leadership development, and recognition of advanced practice roles. Policy reforms such as a National Nursing Workforce Plan, passage of the Comprehensive Nursing Bill, and competitive compensation were imperative to empower PHNs. Strengthening public health nursing was discovered to be crucial in achieving health equity and a resilient healthcare system in the Philippines.
Human ; Public Health Nursing ; Universal Health Care ; Primary Health Care ; Health Equity
10.Patients safety events at Philippine General Hospital.
Maria Antonia E. HABANA ; Homer U. CO ; Koleen C. PASAMBA ; Maria Cecilia E. PUNZALAN
Acta Medica Philippina 2025;59(19):6-13
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
Proper documentation of patient safety events is important to be able to provide changes that can prevent events from occurring again. The Philippine General Hospital launched an online platform for reporting patient safety events in 2017. This paper aimed to describe the patient safety events, initial response to the event, and preventive actions done in the institution.
METHODSThis is a retrospective descriptive study of patient safety event records from August 2017 to April 2022. General data of the patients, details surrounding the events, response to the event, and preventive measures done after the event were documented. Descriptive analysis was performed.
RESULTSThere was a total of 625 events reported with 525 total unique reports. There was an increased rate of patient safety event reports from 2021 to 2022. The average rate was 23.8 and 25.7 reports per month, respectively. Most reports were for in-patient cases and were type 3 preventable adverse events. The general initial response of healthcare personnel to the adverse events is to provide the appropriate clinical care. Preventive measures include re-orientation and event specific actions.
CONCLUSIONDocumentation is crucial for patient safety events to provide solutions and prevent reoccurrence of these events that can cause harm to patients.
Human ; Healthcare Quality ; Quality Of Health Care ; Medical Errors ; Patient Safety ; Patient Harm


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