Senator Sonny Angara is seeking to amend Republic Act 11036 or the Mental Health Act to allow qualified individuals to immediately receive compensation and other applicable financial assistance under the law.
Angara said the ongoing crisis brought by the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has turned mental health into a critical issue for many people who find it difficult to seek help given the multitude of cases being handled by the overwhelmed health care system.
He cited the case of Corporal Winston Ragos, a former member of the Army’s 31st Infantry Battalion under the 9th Infantry “Spear” Division, who was shot dead by a policeman after an altercation at a quarantine control point in Barangay Pasong Putik, Quezon City in April 21, 2020.
Ragos was reported to have suffered from mental health issues, which had affected him since he was still in active service in 2012.
Angara said Ragos was fine while under medical care, however, when the enhanced community quarantine was enforced in Metro Manila and the rest of Luzon, seeking medical help and getting his medication proved to be difficult for Ragos and his family.
The Mental Health Act requires PhilHealth to provide insurance packages to patients affected by mental health conditions, and to ensure they have access to the medicines they need.
“People with mental health conditions should have access to affordable essential health services.”
“People with mental health conditions should have access to affordable essential health services, at all levels of the national healthcare system,” Angara said.
“However, while we do have the Philippine Veterans Affairs Office (PVAO), VMMC and the Mental Health Act in play to help veterans who need support, the unfortunate incident involving Corporal Ragos emphasizes a need to revisit, reexamine, and realign mental health services,” the veteran legislator added.
Angara recently filed Senate Bill 1471, which seeks to amend Section 5 of R.A. 11036 to include a section on the “Rights of Service Users.”
The new section gives the service user the right to “immediately receive compensation benefits and/or any special financial assistance” that he or she is entitled to under existing laws, “should the service user sustain temporary or permanent mental disability while in the performance of duty or by reason of his or her office or position.”
“As the case of Corporal Ragos has shown us, some of the existing policies and guidelines need updates to better serve our men in uniform,” the seasoned lawmaker said.
“As the case of Corporal Ragos has shown us, some of the existing policies and guidelines need updates to better serve our men in uniform.”
“Hopefully, a vaccine against COVID-19 is developed or the lockdown restrictions are eased already because the sooner we can get our lives back to normal – when people are able to go out again and see their friends and families, this will be very beneficial to their mental and emotional health,” the senator concluded.