1.A framework for mental health services to address the gender-related concerns of UP Manila constituents
Evangeline B. dela Fuente ; Maria Arla Andrea G. Carasco ; Victoria Patricia C. dela Llana ; Yra Marie Calamiong-Otchengco
Philippine Journal of Health Research and Development 2025;29(1):23-28
BACKGROUND
In response to the need to provide for mental health services to address gender-related concerns in a higher education institute, the University of the Philippines (UP) Manila Center for Gender and Women Studies (CGWS) commissioned a project to formulate a framework for the increasing volume of referrals.
METHODOLOGYA mixed methods study was done in order to gather data to create a responsive and practical mental health care service provision framework with and for service providers and service users in the university. An online survey (N=135), focus group discussion, key informant interviews, and a round table discussion were conducted, with constituents of the university recruited through purposive sampling.
RESULTSA stepped-care model was proposed, consisting of: 1. Preventive Well-Being Resources, 2. Supportive Well-Being Interventions and Initial Screening Resources, 3. Structured Interventions, and 4. Interventions for Severe Mental Health Problems.
CONCLUSIONThe framework formulated in collaboration with service providers and service users in the university addresses the goals of optimizing existing resources and enhancing service provision. Implementation and evaluation of this framework, as well as further information regarding the target population and their use of this model, are proposed avenues for further research.
Human ; Gender ; Gender Identity ; Sexual Harassment ; Mental Health ; Mental Health Services ; Lgbtq ; Sexual And Gender Minorities ; Psychiatry ; Psychology
2.Facilitating and hindering factors in the provision of incentives and benefits for Barangay Health Workers (BHWs) in Oriental Mindoro: Insights from Focus Group Discussions (FGDs) and Key Informant Interviews (KIIs).
Onofre A. MAMINTA JR. ; Reynaldo H. IMPERIAL
Philippine Journal of Health Research and Development 2025;29(2):9-12
BACKGROUD
In 1995, RA 7883 was enacted stating the incentives and benefits which can be provided for BHWs. In the advent of the Universal Health Care, the role of the BHWs will be crucial more than ever and to ensure the sustainability of the program is an urgent concern. There is a need to identify the hindrances in the provision of incentives and benefits for the BHWs in coming up with recommendations on how to improve it.
METHODOLOGYFocus group discussions on selected BHWs and key informant interviews on policy makers and implementors were conducted to assess the reinforcing and hindering factors on the provision of incentives and benefits for the BHWs.
RESULTThe report outlines key factors affecting BHWs in Oriental Mindoro. While the BHW organization has potential to offer incentives, it needs stronger oversight from the Local Government Unit (LGU) to be effective. NGOs, provide crucial funding for training BHWs in remote areas. Political interference in appointing BHWs, with frequent changes in leadership, disrupts the program's stability. Training opportunities are limited by a lack of funding, leaving many BHWs undertrained. Additionally, local ordinances that offer benefits to BHWs often fail due to unclear policies, changing local leadership, and insufficient budgets.
CONCLUSIONThe BHW program continues to face persistent challenges in the provision of incentives and benefits, largely due to the lack of clear, comprehensive, and enforceable policies and guidelines.
Human ; Health Services Needs And Demand
4.A call for re-visioning participation: Realist review of participation in community-based rehabilitation for the inclusion of children with disabilities in low-income and low-middle-income countries.
Karen S. SAGUN ; Maria Eliza R. AGUILA
Acta Medica Philippina 2025;59(14):106-117
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE
Community-based rehabilitation (CBR) represents a multifaceted social intervention designed to tackle issues related to access, equity, and service quality. Within the framework of CBR, participation stands as a pivotal principle, albeit one that frequently goes unnoticed, particularly concerning children with disabilities. Consequently, this realist synthesis embarks on an exploration of the present landscape, participation mechanisms, and resulting outcomes within CBR initiatives tailored for children with disabilities in low and low-middle-income countries.
METHODSThe realist approach is utilized to explain the causal mechanisms and explore the context, mechanism, and outcome of participation in CBR programs. A systematic search was conducted across ten databases up to April 2021. Studies were included if they involved children with disabilities aged 17 years and below, were implemented in World Bank-classified low-income or low-middle-income countries, discussed implementation mechanisms and community participation, and described outcomes. No language restrictions or publication type limitations were applied. The search process employed double screening of title, abstract, and full-text levels, followed by a snowballing technique. Quality assessment followed the RAMESES standards for realist reviews. Data extraction and analysis yielded context-mechanism-outcome configurations.
RESULTSThirteen articles were included in the synthesis, from which three context-mechanism-outcome configurations were identified: (1) family-facilitated intervention through training in the immediate environment of children with disabilities leads to knowledge translation of caregivers, (2) inaccessible healthcare services require establishing a referral system and augmenting human resource to ensure the system’s capacity to accommodate the magnified need, and (3) established collaboration of researcher, professionals, and community with stakeholder involvement in the CBR management leads to program adoption and documented effectiveness. Both training and establishing referral systems as implementation mechanisms pose sustainability challenges due to dependency on funding. Overall, participation as a form of agency is more often an implied concept. Training is a common mechanism of implementation, where women play a critical role as proxies of children with disabilities, being their caregivers and advocates. Positive and negative outcomes focus on the condition of children with disabilities and the trainees’ knowledge and awareness.
CONCLUSIONA critical analysis of children's and community's participation in the context, mechanism, and outcome unravels the non-participation of children with disabilities and tokenism of the community stakeholders in the CBR programs. Maximizing the contribution of children with disabilities and community stakeholders is called for, aligned with the ladder of participation, toward their democratic participation. Study limitations include the paucity of published CBR programs reporting participation mechanisms in low and low-middle-income countries and the exclusion of studies from economically disadvantaged communities in high-income countries.
Human ; Community Participation ; Developing Countries ; Disabled Children ; Community Health Services
5.The effects of a corporate wellness program on the physical, occupational, socio-emotional, and spiritual wellness of Filipino Workers
Nica Marie SJ. Argañ ; osa ; Virgel C. Binghay
Acta Medica Philippina 2024;58(5):28-42
Objective:
The study determined the effects of corporate wellness programs (CWP) on Filipino workers’ physical,
occupational, socio-emotional, intellectual, and spiritual wellness.
Methods:
The study looked into the components of a CWP, its forms of communication, the respondents’ level of participation, motivation, and their physical, occupational, socio-emotional, intellectual, and spiritual well-being to determine their wellness status during the pandemic. The study utilized an online survey to examine questions related to the efficacy of such programs, descriptive statistics, correlation analysis to assess the respondents’ sociodemographic profiles, and point biserial correlation to test the association of CWP to their wellness status.
Results:
The research showed that 90% of the respondents participated in their organization’s CWP, contradicting most studies that state CWP suffers from a low participation rate. CWP initiatives are mostly publicized through electronic mail, printed in memos, then posted on the bulletin board, and shared through the company website and social media. In addition, the study showed that overall wellness mean scores were higher in employees who were aware of their wellness programs than those who were not and in participating vis-à-vis non-participating employees.
Conclusion
The study’s six assumptions showed positive results, indicating that CWPs are beneficial in improving employees’ overall wellness. However, the per paradigm and overall wellness scores were weakly associated with participation and awareness status based on the point biserial correlation. No adverse effects were recorded in the study. In addition, the study discovered that employees were active in personal wellness initiatives, leading to high scores in their wellness dimensions. The study showed different individual wellness initiatives implying that employees were also proactive about their total well-being.
Health Promotion
;
Health Promotion
;
COVID-19
;
Philippines
;
Preventive Health Services
6.A mixed-method study on rural community’s response to public health emergency in the Philippines: Lessons from the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic
Charlie C. Falguera ; Filedito D. Tandinco ; Charlie E. Labarda ; Adelaida G. Rosaldo ; Carmen N. Firmo ; Robelita N. Varona
Acta Medica Philippina 2024;58(2):16-26
Background:
People from rural communities are not spared from COVID-19. But implementing preventive measures and strategies can be made to control the spread.
Objective:
This study was conducted to describe the epidemiologic situation and the healthcare capacity of the
locality, determine the responses and strategies implemented in the control of COVID-19, and explain the activities performed in relation to the epidemiologic situation in Tarangnan, Samar – a low-income class municipality in the Philippines.
Methods:
A mixed qualitative–quantitative design was employed in this study. Descriptive documentary research design through review of records from March to October 2020 was utilized. For the qualitative context, a case study design was employed whereby focus group discussions and key informant interviews using open-ended questions were performed.
Results:
A total of 66 individuals were recorded as having COVID-19 in the municipality from March to October
2020. The first recorded confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Eastern Visayas were two adults in Tarangnan, Samar, in
March 2020. Since then, additional confirmed cases have been recorded every month, but confirmed COVID-19
dramatically reduced from August to October 2020. Qualitative analysis revealed stringent COVID-19 preventive
measures reflected in the confirmed case numbers. The tailwinds of the COVID-19 response include: the SARS
pandemic precedent, coordination and communication, outpouring of support from other government and nongovernment partners, and innovative community-based approaches. The headwinds of COVID-19 response were challenges in imposing minimum health and safety precautions, stigmatization, and discrimination.
Conclusion
Even if challenges have arisen in implementing measures against the spread of the disease, good outcomes have been achieved through persistent good practice, positive modifications, and community-based innovations.
Community Participation
;
Community Health Services
;
COVID-19
;
Rural Health
;
Philippines
7.Awareness, availment, and satisfaction on various health services among residents of a rural community in Samar, Philippines: A mixed methods study
Sherrie Ann Cananua-Labid ; Sheriah Laine M. de Paz-Silava ; Julie Ann M. Quilatan ; Abigail M. Cabaguing ; Jhonil C. Bajado
Acta Medica Philippina 2024;58(Early Access 2024):1-10
Objectives:
This study sought to investigate citizens' awareness, availment, satisfaction, and perceived need for action with health services offered by a rural municipality in Samar, Philippines.
Methods:
This study utilized an explanatory-sequential research design, involving 150 participants selected through the Kish Grid Method via a multi-stage sampling approach within the community. The Citizen Satisfaction Index System was employed to assess the levels of awareness, utilization, and satisfaction with health services in the municipality.
Results:
Among the assessed health services, the cohort had low awareness and low availment on services for
communicable diseases, basic dental/oral hygiene, and reproductive health. While high awareness was observed for childbirth services, there was low availment on these. The participants showed high awareness and availment for only two services namely, free general consultation and the free medicine program. While high satisfaction was seen among all services that were assessed, the participants also expressed a high perceived need for action to improve their delivery.
Conclusion
This study presents a comprehensive view of rural healthcare in Samar, Philippines. Despite high satisfaction rates, gaps persist in the citizen’s awareness and availment due to accessibility, costs, fear, misinformation, and cultural differences. The findings of this study can guide policymakers in identifying gaps in healthcare in rural areas.
Primary Health Care
;
Health Services
;
Awareness
;
Personal Satisfaction
9.Availability and affordability of essential antihypertensive medicines in public and private primary care drug facilities in a 4th class municipality in the Philippines
Reyshell Marie M. Lat ; Ron Joseph N. Samonte ; Frances Lois U. Ngo
Acta Medica Philippina 2024;58(Early Access 2024):1-9
Background:
The pharmaceutical subsystem is a complex interrelationship among different stakeholders that ensure access to safe, effective, and quality pharmaceutical products in the market. Understanding the availability and affordability as key areas for access to medicines is essential to appreciate the strategies needed to strengthen the pharmaceutical subsystem.
Objectives:
This study aimed to determine the availability and affordability of essential antihypertensive medicines in public primary care facilities and private retail drugstores in a 4th class municipality. Further, the study determined the price comparisons of these essential antihypertensive medicines with international reference prices.
Methods:
This is a quantitative, cross-sectional study design which employed a modified WHO/HAI methodology to quantify antihypertensive medicines’ availability and affordability in public and private primary care drug facilities. Selection of medicines was based on a criteria applicable for the primary care setting. Availability was measured through visual inspection of the selected medicines in the facility, affordability was estimated through the selling price of medicines in the public and private facilities, respectively, and was divided by the local minimum wage of the municipality. Median price ratio was computed using the local median prices over the MSH 2015 international reference prices adjusted for inflation.
Results:
Availability of essential antihypertensive medicines was found to be 12.96% in public facilities and 60.32% in private facilities (p = 0.0002). Only amlodipine is observed to be available in both public (83.33%) and private (85.71%) facilities, while only metoprolol 50 mg tab (33.33%) and amlodipine 5 mg tab (83.33%) were available in public facilities. All medicines are below 1 MPR, but carvedilol 6.25 mg (1 tab BID: 1.32; 2 tabs BID: 2.65), 25 mg (BID: 2.65), and enalapril 5 mg (BID: 1.14; TID: 1.70) treatment regimens are unaffordable compared to a worker’s day wage.
Conclusion
Availability of essential antihypertensive medicines is diverse comparing public and private facilities. There is a need to increase the availability of antihypertensive medicines in public facilities as this is an important quality measure of primary care services. Public facilities can leverage on the availability of medicines in private pharmacies by forming Primary Care Provider Networks. While most medicines were deemed affordable in the private setting, there are still drugs such as carvedilol and enalapril, that need to be regulated. There is a need to strengthen the local pharmaceutical subsystem because it is essential to ensure safe, effective, and quality medicines in the local health system through adequate mobilization of resources.
Human
;
access to medicines
;
health services accessibility
;
affordability
;
costs and cost analysis
10.Awareness, availment, and satisfaction on various health services among residents of a rural community in Samar, Philippines: A mixed methods study
Sherrie Ann Cananua-Labid ; Sheriah Laine M. de Paz-Silava ; Julie Ann M. Quilatan ; Abigail M. Cabaguing ; Jhonil C. Bajado
Acta Medica Philippina 2024;58(23):32-41
OBJECTIVES
This study sought to investigate citizens' awareness, availment, satisfaction, and perceived need for action with health services offered by a rural municipality in Samar, Philippines.
METHODSThis study utilized an explanatory-sequential research design, involving 150 participants selected through the Kish Grid Method via a multi-stage sampling approach within the community. The Citizen Satisfaction Index System was employed to assess the levels of awareness, utilization, and satisfaction with health services in the municipality.
RESULTSAmong the assessed health services, the cohort had low awareness and low availment on services for communicable diseases, basic dental/oral hygiene, and reproductive health. While high awareness was observed for childbirth services, there was low availment on these. The participants showed high awareness and availment for only two services namely, free general consultation and the free medicine program. While high satisfaction was seen among all services that were assessed, the participants also expressed a high perceived need for action to improve their delivery.
CONCLUSIONThis study presents a comprehensive view of rural healthcare in Samar, Philippines. Despite high satisfaction rates, gaps persist in the citizen’s awareness and availment due to accessibility, costs, fear, misinformation, and cultural differences. The findings of this study can guide policymakers in identifying gaps in healthcare in rural areas.
Human ; Primary Health Care ; Health Services ; Awareness ; Personal Satisfaction


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